Hiberno - English or Irish - English The English Spoken in Ireland
Hiberno - English or Irish - English The English Spoken in Ireland
Hiberno - English or Irish - English The English Spoken in Ireland
The English language as it is spoken in the island of Ireland. It is not one dialect itself but a collecHon of dialects in the same way that English in Great Britain is a collecHon of dialects. But some features can be found across a lot of dialects of Hiberno-English.
The English language as it is spoken in the island of Ireland. The language has developed dierently to other Englishes in the world just as they have developed dierently
It is not one dialect itself but a collecHon of dialects in the same way that English in Great Britain is a collecHon of dialects. People in Ireland do not all speak the same Geographic distribuHon is only one factor All language can be viewed in terms of variables
But
some
features
can
be
found
across
a
lot
of
dialects
of
Irish
English.
You
may
have
noHced
that
certain
syntacHc
structures
such
as
the
habitual
present:
He
does
be
drinking
there
every
day
are
found
everywhere
History
1169:
Anglo-Norman
invasion
1171:
Henry
II
of
England
declared
himself
Lord
of
Ireland
1204:
king
John
lost
Normandy
1366:
Statutes
of
Kilkenny
1542
Henry
VIII
took
the
Htle
King
of
Ireland,
giving
Irish
chie_ains
such
English
Htles
as
Earl
of
Tyrone
16th
&
17th
C.:
plantaHons
1600:
Cromwell
1800:
Act
of
Union
1829:
Catholic
EmancipaHon
1831:
NaHonal
Schools
Act
1847-50:
Famine
Inuences
Earlier
English
Irish
Language
The
process
of
learning
English
Learning
English
without
naHve
speaker
instrucHon
Economic
driver
for
language
change
Phonology:
Sounds
I-E
is
RhoHc:
postvocalic
/r/
is
sounded
Many
dialects
of
standard
english
are
non- rhoHc
(the
post-vocalic
/r/
is
not
sounded)
so
pear
becomes
[pe]
// being
the
unstressed
vowel
in
english,
as
in
about
Note that we will someHmes have to use the Interna'onal Phone'c Alphabet to represent sounds The English alphabet is useless for this as English orthography is totally crazy See Sea Cease Seize Sees (/si/)
Phonology:
Sounds
O_en
in
standard
English
dialects,
a
postvocalic
/r/
is
introduced
So
idea
becomes
[aidir]
in
the
speech
of
many
BriHsh
speakers
of
English
Phonology:
Sounds
NoHce
also
the
way
which
is
pronounced
in
I-E
It
is
dierent
to
witch,
but
most
S-E
speakers
would
pronounce
witch
and
which
the
same
way
Phonology:
Sounds
Other
consonantal
dierences
can
be
seen
in
the
pronunciaHon
of
th
as
in
thy
and
thigh,
even
where
the
speaker
tries
to
be
careful
I-E
users
dont
match
the
S-E
D
and
T
but
rather
manage
either
a
[d]
or
[t]
or
a
dental
d1
or
t1.
Phonology:
Sounds
How
does
an
Irish
person
pronounce
the
words:
Shirt
or
Flat
Phonology:
Sounds
How
does
an
Irish
person
pronounce
the
words:
Shirt
or
Flat
More
like
shirsh
or
ash?
the
nal
/t/
is
very
sibilant
in
H-E
Phonology:
Sounds
The
/s/
sound
in
S-E
can
o_en
occur
as
a
[S]
shtar
or
jaysus
chrisht.
Phonology:
Sounds
The
applicaHon
of
the
Great
Vowel
Shi_
which
has
gone
further
in
SE
than
in
HE
So
some
older
pronunciaHons
are
preserved
in
I-E
So
you
can
hear
tay
for
tea,
Yeats
is
pronounced
like
Yates
So
it
contrasts
with
Keats
Phonology:
Sounds
Film
and
Prism
are
pronounced
as
llm
and
prism
and
someHmes
rm
as
rm
Deriving
from
the
diculHes
a
speaker
of
Irish
would
have
had
with
the
consonantal
clusters
sm,
lm
and
rm.
Phonology:
Sounds
Similarly
petrol
can
sound
like
peTrol.
With
the
intervocalic
/t/
dierent
and
the
/tr/
cluster
altered
by
having
a
vowel
inserted
between
the
two
consonants
Syntax
The
consuetudinal
present
(the
do
be
form):
Does
he
be
sick
a
lot,
She
doesn't
be
working
all
the
'me.
Habitual
present:
we
do
have
a
lot
of
trouble
with
the
radio.
Syntax
The
resultaHve
perfecHve:
I
have
it
done
to
mean
I
have
it
done.
The
a_er
perfect
(immediate
perfecHve):
Im
aDer
forgeEng
to
buy
the
Crunchies;
Its
aDer
geEng
a
bit
warmer.
For
to
inniHves
of
purpose:
He
came
to
college
for
to
learn
linguisHcs
The
Lexicon
Older
English
Usages:
Crack,
Cog,
Mot,
Louser,
Bowsey,
Delph,
Learn
Inuence
from
Irish:
Bold,
Boxty,
Meas,
Amadawn,
Smithereens,
Fooster,
Bohereen,
Phoney