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Which Gaelic is Which?

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PostJanuary 12 2006, 13:04 PM
JSmith13


"Scríbhneoir d'Éigean"
Joined: 14 Apr 2003
Location: Sa Stáisiún Dóiteáin anois....arís!!
Posts: 20,527
jamesnp wrote:
JSmith13 wrote:
There really isn't a 'Leinster' dialect per se. Ulster, Munster, Connaught, and Standard, all of which you'll see used here. I try to stick as closely to standard as I can, but it's just a preference.


Not entirely right, there is, or at least was a Leinster dialect, though it died out in the mid 20th century.

When speaking you should use whatever dialect you want, though when writing it can only be considered correct to use the official standard.

Look at it this way, do you write formal English using local idioms or sayings or make your spelling reflect your accent? No. Same is the (or should be, though many seem to take umbrage) the case in Irish.

Usually though this only really affects grammar and the lexicon in Irish remains the same in all dialects, though preference is given to certain words over others.

-jp


Thanks. I've always wondered why there was no Leinster listed when talking about dialects. Why did it die out?
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PostJanuary 12 2006, 13:13 PM
Asarlaí


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JSmith13 wrote:


Thanks. I've always wondered why there was no Leinster listed when talking about dialects. Why did it die out?


I've often wondered that - You'd have thought there would have been a small community somewhere.

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PostJanuary 12 2006, 13:15 PM
JSmith13


"Scríbhneoir d'Éigean"
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Location: Sa Stáisiún Dóiteáin anois....arís!!
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Asarlaí wrote:
JSmith13 wrote:


Thanks. I've always wondered why there was no Leinster listed when talking about dialects. Why did it die out?


I've often wondered that - You'd have thought there would have been a small community somewhere.


Aontaím leat faoi sin. I've always wondered why poor Leinster was left out.
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PostJanuary 12 2006, 14:16 PM
jamesnp


"Scéalaí Mór"
Joined: 20 Mar 2004
Location: Cill Iníon Léinín
Posts: 2,997
Well, there is still a Gaeltacht in Meath... though that is actually the remnants of a group of Conemara speakers who upped and left conemara in one go... so they speak Conemara Irish.

The last Leinster speaker died, and with him the dialect.

The Anglicisations of place names still reflect the Leinster dialect's pronunciation though. For example, where I live, Cill Iníon Léinín or Killiney must have been pronounced something like Cill'éinín with a soft N.

I'd love to do some research on it, maybe for my Phd.

-jp
PostJanuary 12 2006, 14:20 PM
Richie


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Joined: 31 May 2005
Location: Baile Átha Cliath, Éire
Posts: 2,277
JSmith13 wrote:
There really isn't a 'Leinster' dialect per se.


Leigh é seo. lach
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PostJanuary 12 2006, 14:24 PM
JSmith13


"Scríbhneoir d'Éigean"
Joined: 14 Apr 2003
Location: Sa Stáisiún Dóiteáin anois....arís!!
Posts: 20,527
jamesnp wrote:
Well, there is still a Gaeltacht in Meath... though that is actually the remnants of a group of Conemara speakers who upped and left conemara in one go... so they speak Conemara Irish.

The last Leinster speaker died, and with him the dialect.

The Anglicisations of place names still reflect the Leinster dialect's pronunciation though. For example, where I live, Cill Iníon Léinín or Killiney must have been pronounced something like Cill'éinín with a soft N.

I'd love to do some research on it, maybe for my Phd.

-jp


Which dialect was it closer to? I'd be interested to see how it's written and hear how it's spoken.
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PostJanuary 12 2006, 14:29 PM
jamesnp


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Joined: 20 Mar 2004
Location: Cill Iníon Léinín
Posts: 2,997
I've no idea. Information about it isn't that easy to find. I hear there's a few recordings of it though, so I might look into that.
PostJanuary 12 2006, 14:29 PM
Richie


"Scéalaí Mór"
Joined: 31 May 2005
Location: Baile Átha Cliath, Éire
Posts: 2,277
I think the Leinster dialect died out because of the plantations.

Irish speakers in Leinster (and to a lesser extent, Ulster and Munster) were sent to Connaught, killed, or forced to speak English. If they were sent to Connaught, their dialect would have adjusted over the generations until it eventually died out there too.
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PostJanuary 12 2006, 14:32 PM
jamesnp


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Joined: 20 Mar 2004
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Richie wrote:
or forced to speak English.


By their parents... had a fascinating lecture on how the Irish killed Irish, not the British, the other day.

-jp
PostJanuary 12 2006, 14:32 PM
JSmith13


"Scríbhneoir d'Éigean"
Joined: 14 Apr 2003
Location: Sa Stáisiún Dóiteáin anois....arís!!
Posts: 20,527
Richie wrote:
I think the Leinster dialect died out because of the plantations.

Irish speakers in Leinster (and to a lesser extent, Ulster and Munster) were sent to Connaught, killed, or forced to speak English. If they were sent to Connaught, their dialect would have adjusted over the generations until it eventually died out there too.


That makes sense, a chara.
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