Irish initial mutations

(Redirected from Eclipsis)

Irish, like all modern Celtic languages, is characterised by its initial consonant mutations.[1] These mutations affect the initial consonant of a word under specific morphological and syntactic conditions. The mutations are an important tool in understanding the relationship between two words and can differentiate various meanings.

A Irish language sign which displays an inflected form of the word Caisleán "castle" with a mutated ⟨c⟩.

Irish, like Scottish Gaelic and Manx, features two initial consonant mutations: lenition (Irish: séimhiú [ˈʃeːvʲuː]) and eclipsis (urú [ˈʊɾˠuː]) (the alternative names, aspiration for lenition and nasalisation for eclipsis, are also used, but those terms are misleading).

Originally these mutations were phonologically governed external sandhi effects: lenition was caused by a consonant being between two vowels, and eclipsis when a nasal preceded an obstruent, including at the beginning of a word.

Irish also features t-prothesis and h-prothesis, related phenomena which affect vowel-initial words.

See Irish phonology for a discussion of the symbols used on this page.

Historical development

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Lenition

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Lenition as an initial mutation originally stems from the historical allophonic lenition of an intervocalic consonant, both word internally and across word boundaries, i.e if a word ended in a vowel and the next word began with a consonant + a vowel, the consonant lenited.

Today, these former final vowels are usually elided, but the lenition of following consonants remains and has been grammaticised. For example, Proto-Celtic *esyo "his" caused the lenition of a following consonant due to its final vowel and its modern form a now causes lenition, keeping it distinct from a "her" and a "their", which cause h-prothesis and eclipsis respectively.

Lenition caused stops and *m to become fricatives, *s to debuccalise to [h], *f to elide, and the liquids *l, *n, *r to split into fortis and lenis variants. Though by the end of the Middle Irish period lenited *m largely lost its nasal quality, lenited *t debuccalised to [h], and lenited *d lost its coronal articulation.

Lenition did not only occur word initially, though non-initial lenition was never grammaticised. For example Proto-Celtic *knāmiscnáimcnáimh "bone", and *abalnāaballabhaill "apple tree".

Prothetic ⟨t⟩- and ⟨h⟩-

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While it is not initially apparent, the prothesis of ⟨t⟩ and ⟨h⟩ stems from historical lenition combined with vowel reduction.

The prosthetic ⟨t⟩- of vowel initial words is a fossilised fragment of the Proto-Celtic masculine definite article *sindos. Before vowels, the *s of the ending *-os was lenited to [h], which (combined with the loss of the *-o-) devoiced the preceding *-d- to *-t.

  • i.e. *sindos [sindoh]intan t-).

The prosthetic ⟨t⟩ of ⟨s⟩ initial words is a fossilised fragment of the d of Proto-Celtic nominative feminine definite article *sindā and masculine genitive definite article *sindī. Since they ended in vowels, a following word initial *s was lenited to [h] which (combined with the loss of the *-ā, *-ī) devoiced the preceding *-d to *-t.

  • i.e. *sindā sūli [sindaː huːli] → int ṡúilan tsúil)

The prothetic ⟨h⟩ of vowel initial words has two origins, the first being epenthetic to avoid vowel hiatus, and the second being the fossilised remnant of a historic consonant. For example, the *s of Proto-Celtic *esyās "her" was lenited between vowels to [h]. Overtime *esyās was reduced to a but the [h] remains when it is followed by a vowel initial word but is now written as part of the following word.

Eclipsis

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Eclipsis originally stems from the historical coalescence of consonant clusters beginning with a nasal, both word internally and across word boundaries, i.e if a word ended in a nasal and the next word began with a stop or labial fricative, they would coalesce.

Today, many of the former final nasals have been elided, but still have an effect on the pronunciation of a following consonant, which has been grammaticised. For example, the Proto-Celtic genitive plural of the definite article *sindoisom has lost its final nasal and been reduced to na but it now causes the eclipsis of a following consonant or the prothesis of ⟨n-⟩ to a vowel.

The cluster reductions involved in eclipsis turned nasal stops followed by a voiced stop into nasal stops, nasal stops followed by a voiceless stop into voiced plosives, nasal stops followed by a voiceless labial fricative into a voiced fricative, and words which have lost their final nasal add an ⟨n-⟩ to vowel initial words.

These cluster reductions did not only occur word initially, though non-initial coalescence was never grammaticised. For example, Proto-Celtic *lindoslindlinn "pool", and *kʷenkʷecóiccúig "five".

Summary table

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This table shows the orthographical and phonological effects of lenition, eclipsis, h-prothesis, and t-prothesis. Vowels are represented by ⟨v⟩ and /V/. Consonants are broad before ⟨a, á, o, ó, u, ú⟩ and slender before ⟨e, é, i, í⟩. See also Irish orthography which has a table showing non-initial lenited consonants which elided or vocalised to form diphthongs or long vowels.

Unmutated Lenition Eclipsis T-Prothesis H-Prothesis Meaning
Spell. IPA E.G. Spell. IPA E.G. Spell. IPA E.G. Spell. IPA E.G. Spell. IPA E.G.
V
v
/V/ éan
/eːnˠ/
nV
n-v
/n̪ˠV/
/n̠ʲV/
n-éan
/n̠ʲeːnˠ/
tV
t-v
/t̪ˠV/
/tʲV/
t-éan
/tʲeːnˠ/
hV
hv
/hV/ an
/heːnˠ/
bird
B
b
/bˠ/
/bʲ/
bean
/bʲanˠ/
Bh
bh
/w/
/vʲ/
bhean
/vʲanˠ/
mB
mb
/mˠ/
/mʲ/
mbean
/mʲanˠ/
woman
C
c
/k/
/c/
ceann
/caːn̪ˠ/
Ch
ch
/x/
/ç/
cheann
/çaːn̪ˠ/
gC
gc
/ɡ/
/ɟ/
gceann
/ɟaːn̪ˠ/
head
D
d
/d̪ˠ/
/dʲ/
droim
/d̪ˠɾˠiːmʲ/
Dh
dh
/ɣ/
/j/
dhroim
/ɣɾˠiːmʲ/
nD
nd
/n̪ˠ/
/n̠ʲ/
ndroim
/n̪ˠɾˠiːmʲ/
back
F
f
/fˠ/
/fʲ/
freagra
/fʲɾʲaɡɾˠə/
Fh
fh
fhreagra
/ɾʲaɡɾˠə/
bhF
bhf
/w/
/vʲ/
bhfreagra
/vʲɾʲaɡɾˠə/
answer
G
g
/ɡ/
/ɟ/
glúin
/gl̪ˠuːnʲ/
Gh
gh
/ɣ/
/j/
ghlúin
/ɣl̪ˠuːnʲ/
nG
ng
/ŋ/
/ɲ/
nglúin
/ŋl̪ˠuːnʲ/
knee
L
l
/l̪ˠ/
/l̠ʲ/
leanbh
/l̠ʲanˠəw/
L
l
*/lˠ/
*/lʲ/
leanbh
/lʲanˠəw/
baby
M
m
/mˠ/
/mʲ/
máthair
/mˠaːhəɾʲ/
Mh
mh
/w/
/vʲ/
mháthair
/waːhəɾʲ/
mother
N
n
/n̪ˠ/
/n̠ʲ/
naomh
/n̪ˠiːw/
N
n
*/nˠ/
*/nʲ/
naomh
/nˠiːw/
saint
P
p
/pˠ/
/pʲ/
peann
/pʲaːn̪ˠ/
Ph
ph
/fˠ/
/fʲ/
pheann
/fʲaːn̪ˠ/
bP
bp
/bˠ/
/bʲ/
bpeann
/bʲaːn̪ˠ/
pen
S
s
/sˠ/
/ʃ/
súil
/sˠuːlʲ/
Sh
sh
/h/ shúil
/huːlʲ/
tS
ts
/t̪ˠ/
/tʲ/
tsúil
/t̪ˠuːlʲ/
eye
T
t
/t̪ˠ/
/tʲ/
teach
/tʲax/
Th
th
theach
/hax/
dT
dt
/d̪ˠ/
/dʲ/
dteach
/dʲax/
house

* Not all dialects contrast lenited ⟨l⟩ and ⟨n⟩ from their unlenited forms. See Irish Phonology#Fortis and lenis sonorants.

Environments of Lenition

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After proclitics

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After the definite article

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The definite article triggers the lenition of:

  1. a feminine noun in the nominative singular
    an bhean "the woman"
  2. a masculine noun in the genitive singular
    an fhir "of the man" e.g. carr an fhir, the man's car (car of the man)
  3. a noun in the dative singular, when the article follows one of the prepositions de "from", do "to" or i "in"
    do + an = don: don fhear "to the man"
    de + an = den: den bhean "from the woman"
    i + an = sa(n): sa chrann "in the tree"; san fhómhar "in the autumn"

Lenition is blocked when a coronal consonant is preceded by an.

an deoch "the drink", although deoch is feminine nominative singular
an tí "of the house", although is masculine genitive singular

Instead of leniting to /h/, after the definite article, /sˠ, ʃ/ become /t̪ˠ, tʲ/ (written ⟨ts⟩):

an tsúil /ən̪ˠ t̪ˠuːlʲ/ "the eye" (fem. nom. sg.)
an tsaoil /ən̪ˠ t̪ˠiːlʲ/ "of the world" (masc. gen. sg.)

After the vocative particle a

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  • a Bhríd "Bríd!"
  • a Sheáin "Seán!"
  • a chairde "my friends!"

After possessive pronouns

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The possessive pronouns that trigger lenition are mo "my", do "your (sg.)", a "his"

  • mo mhac "my son"
  • do theach "your house"
  • a pheann "his pen"

After certain prepositions

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  • de chrann "out of a tree"
  • faoi chrann "under a tree"
  • mar dhuine "as a person"
  • ó Chorcaigh "from Cork"
  • roimh mhaidin "before morning"
  • trí shioc agus shneachta "through frost and snow"
  • um Cháisc "at Easter"
  • idir fhir agus mh "both men and women"
  • ar bhord "on a table"

After the preterite/conditional of the copula

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  • Ba dhuine mór é. "He was a big person."
  • Ba dheas uait é. "That was nice of you."

After the preterite preverbal particles

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  • Níor mhúinteoir é. "He was not a teacher."
  • Níor thug mé "I didn't give"
  • Ar shagart é? "Was he a priest?"
  • Ar tháinig sé? "Did he come?"

After certain preverbal particles

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  • thuigim "I don't understand"
  • thagann sé "if he comes"
  • an fear a thabharfaidh dom é "the man who will give it to me"

A verb in the preterite, imperfect or conditional

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These were originally preceded by the particle do and often still are in Munster.

  • bhris mé "I broke"
  • bhrisinn "I used to break"
  • bhrisfinn "I would break"

In modifier + head constructions

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Lenition is blocked in these constructions if two coronals are adjacent.

After certain numbers

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The singular form is used after numbers and is lenited in the following cases:

  • aon bhó amháin "one cow"
  • an chéad bhliain "the first year"
  • dhá theach "two houses"
  • beirt fhear "two men"
  • trí bhád "three boats"
  • ceithre bhó "four cows"
  • cúig phunt "five pounds"
  • mhí "six months"

After preposed adjectives

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Constructions of adjective + noun are written as compounds.

  • seanbhean "old woman"
  • drochdhuine "bad person"
  • dea-sheirbhís "good deed"
  • nuatheanga "modern language"
  • tréanmhuir "stormy sea"
  • fíorchneas "true skin"
  • ardbh "high pressure"
  • ógfhear "young man"

After most prefixes

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  • an-bheag "very small"
  • ró-bheag "too small"
  • aisghabháil "retake"
  • athbhliain "new year"
  • dobhréagnaithe "undeniable"
  • fochupán "saucer"
  • forbhríste "overalls"
  • idirchreidmheach "interconfessional"
  • ilphósadh "polygamy"
  • leasmháthair "stepmother"
  • shásta "unhappy"
  • neamhchodladh "insomnia"
  • príomhchathair "capital city"
  • sobhriste "fragile"

The second part of a compound

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  • ainmfhocal "noun" (lit. "name word")
  • ghorm "dark blue"
  • státfhiach "national debt"

In head + modifier constructions

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In these constructions coronals are lenited even following other

  • aimsir bháistí "rainy weather" (lenition after a feminine singular noun)
  • buidéil shú "bottles of juice" (lenition after a plural ending in a slender consonant)
  • teach Sheáin "Seán's house" (lenition of a definite noun in the genitive)

Postposed adjectives in certain circumstances

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  • bean dheas "a pretty woman" (lenition after a feminine singular noun)
  • na fir mhóra "the big men" (lenition after a plural noun ending in a slender consonant)
  • ainm an fhir bhig "the name of the small man" (lenition after a masculine singular noun in the genitive)
  • sa chrann mhór "in the big tree" (lenition after a noun lenited by virtue of being in the dative after den, don, or sa(n))

Environments of Eclipsis

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Eclipsis displayed on a sign in Tramore: Fánán na mBád "slip of the boats". Even in an all-caps, the eclipsed letter is not capitalised.
 
Eclipsis displayed on a sign in Raphoe: Sráith na nGael "Row of the Gaels".

After plural possessive pronouns

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The possessive pronouns that trigger eclipsis are ár "our", bhur "your (pl.)", a "their"

  • ár gcairde "our friends"
  • bhur bpáistí "your (pl.) children"
  • a mbád "their boat",

a can mean "his", "her" or "their", but these different uses can still be distinguished, since a causes lenition when used as "his" (a bhád), causes eclipsis when used as "their" (a mbád), and neither when used as "her" (a bád).

After certain numbers

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The numbers that trigger eclipsis (the noun being in the singular) are:

  • seacht gcapall "seven horses"
  • ocht n-asal "eight donkeys"
  • naoi gcat "nine cats"
  • deich bpeann "ten pens"

After the preposition i "in"

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Before a vowel in is written instead of i n-.

  • i dteach "in a house"
  • in Éirinn "in Ireland"

Genitive plural nouns after the definite article

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The genitive plural article na eclipses a following noun:

  • na n-asal "of the donkeys"
  • na bhfocal "of the words"

Dative singular nouns after the definite article

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In western and southern dialects, nouns beginning with a noncoronal consonant are eclipsed after combinations of preposition + article in the singular (except den, don, and sa(n), which trigger lenition)

  • ag an bhfear "by the man"
  • ar an gcrann "on the tree"

After certain preverbal particles

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  • an poll a dtagann na coiníní as "the hole that the rabbits come out of"
  • An dtagann sé gach lá? "Does he come every day?"
  • bhfuil mo spéaclaí? "Where are my glasses?"
  • Dúirt sé go dtiocfadh sé. "He said that he would come."
  • mbeadh a fhios sin agam "if I had known that"

Changes to vowel-initial words

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In environments where lenition occurs a vowel initial word remains unchanged:

  • an oíche "the night" (feminine singular nominative noun after definite article)
  • an uisce "of the water" (masculine singular genitive noun after definite article)
  • ó Albain "from Scotland" (noun after leniting preposition)
  • seanathair "grandfather" (noun after preposed adjective: sean "old" + athair "father")

However, In environments where neither eclipsis nor lenition is expected, an initial vowel may acquire a prothetic consonant. For example, a vowel-initial masculine singular nominative noun requires a ⟨t-⟩ (a voiceless coronal plosive) after the definite article:

  • an t-uisce "the water" (masculine singular nominative)

Additionally, there is the prothetic ⟨h⟩ (a voiceless glottal fricative), which occurs when both the following conditions are met:

  1. a proclitic causes neither lenition nor eclipsis of consonants.
  2. a proclitic itself ends in a vowel.

Examples of h-prothesis:

  • a haois "her age" (after possessive pronoun a "her"; compare with a aois, "his age" and a n-aois, "their age" with regular urú)
  • go hÉirinn "to Ireland" (after preposition go "to, towards")
  • le hAntaine "with Antaine" (after preposition le "with")
  • na hoíche "of the night" (on feminine singular genitive noun after definite article)
  • na héin "the birds" (on plural nominative/dative noun after definite article)
  • chomh hard le caisleán "as high as a castle" (after chomh [xo] "as")
  • go hálainn "beautifully" (after adverb-forming particle go)
  • himigh uaim "Don't leave me!" (after negative imperative particle "don't")
  • an dara háit "the second place" (after an ordinal numeral)

References

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  1. ^ Kevin M. Conroy (April 2008). Celtic initial consonant mutations - nghath and bhfuil? (B.A.). Boston College. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  NODES
INTERN 2
Note 1