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Irish initial mutations

Irish, like all modern Celtic languages, is characterised by its initial consonant mutations. 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.

Historical development
Lenition 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 now causes lenition, keeping it distinct from "her" and "their", which cause h-prothesis and eclipsis respectively. Lenition caused stops and *m to become fricatives, *s to debuccalise to , *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 , 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 *knāmis → → "bone", and *abalnā → → "apple tree". Prothetic - and - While it is not initially apparent, the prothesis of and stems from historical lenition combined with vowel reduction. The prosthetic - 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 , which (combined with the loss of the *-o-) devoiced the preceding *-d- to *-t. • i.e. *sindos → → ). The prosthetic of 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 which (combined with the loss of the *-ā, *-ī) devoiced the preceding *-d to *-t. • i.e. *sindā sūli [sindaː huːli] → → ) The prothetic 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 . Overtime *esyās was reduced to but the remains when it is followed by a vowel initial word but is now written as part of the following word. Eclipsis 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 but it now causes the eclipsis of a following consonant or the prothesis of 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 to vowel initial words. These cluster reductions did not only occur word initially, though non-initial coalescence was never grammaticised. For example, Proto-Celtic *lindos → → "pool", and *kʷenkʷe → → "five". ==Summary table==
Summary table
This table shows the orthographical and phonological effects of lenition, eclipsis, h-prothesis, and t-prothesis. Vowels are represented by and . Consonants are broad before and slender before . See also Irish orthography which has a table showing non-initial lenited consonants which elided or vocalised to form diphthongs or long vowels. * Not all dialects contrast lenited and from their unlenited forms. See Irish Phonology#Fortis and lenis sonorants. ==Environments of Lenition==
Environments of Lenition
After proclitics After the definite article The definite article triggers the lenition of: • a feminine noun in the nominative singular • : "the woman" • a masculine noun in the genitive singular • : "of the man" e.g. , the man's car (car of the man) • a noun in the dative singular, when the article follows one of the prepositions "from", "to" or "in" • : + = : "to the man" • : + = : "from the woman" • : + = : "in the tree"; "in the autumn" Lenition is blocked when a coronal consonant is preceded by . :: "the drink", although is feminine nominative singular :: "of the house", although is masculine genitive singular Instead of leniting to , after the definite article, become (written ): :: "the eye" (fem. nom. sg.) :: "of the world" (masc. gen. sg.) After the vocative particle • "Bríd!" • "Seán!" • "my friends!" After possessive pronouns The possessive pronouns that trigger lenition are "my", "your (sg.)", "his" • "my son" • "your house" • "his pen" After certain prepositions • "out of a tree" • "under a tree" • "as a person" • "from Cork" • "before morning" • "through frost and snow" • "at Easter" • "both men and women" • "on a table" • "to a tree" • "over a tree" ==== After the preterite/conditional of the copula ==== • "He was a big person." • "That was nice of you." After the preterite preverbal particles • "He was not a teacher." • "I didn't give" • "Was he a priest?" • "Did he come?" After certain preverbal particles • "I don't understand" • "if he comes" • "the man who will give it to me" A verb in the preterite, imperfect or conditional These were originally preceded by the particle and often still are in Munster. • "I broke" • "I used to break" • "I would break" In modifier + head constructions Lenition is blocked in these constructions if two coronals are adjacent. After certain numbers The singular form is used after numbers and is lenited in the following cases: • "one cow" • "the first year" • "two houses" • "two men" • "three boats" • "four cows" • "five pounds" • "six months" After preposed adjectives Constructions of adjective + noun are written as compounds. • "old woman" • "bad person" • "good deed" • "modern language" • "stormy sea" • "true skin" • "high pressure" • "young man" After most prefixes • "very small" • "too small" • "retake" • "new year" • "undeniable" • "saucer" • "overalls" • "interconfessional" • "polygamy" • "stepmother" • "unhappy" • "insomnia" • "capital city" • "fragile" The second part of a compound • "noun" (lit. "name word") • "dark blue" • "national debt" In head + modifier constructions In these constructions coronals are lenited even following other • "rainy weather" (lenition after a feminine singular noun) • "bottles of juice" (lenition after a plural ending in a slender consonant) • "Seán's house" (lenition of a definite noun in the genitive) Postposed adjectives in certain circumstances • "a pretty woman" (lenition after a feminine singular noun) • "the big men" (lenition after a plural noun ending in a slender consonant) • "the name of the small man" (lenition after a masculine singular noun in the genitive) • "in the big tree" (lenition after a noun lenited by virtue of being in the dative after , , or ) ==Environments of Eclipsis == : "slip of the boats". Even in an all-caps, the eclipsed letter is not capitalised. : "Row of the Gaels". After plural possessive pronouns The possessive pronouns that trigger eclipsis are "our", "your (pl.)", "their" • "our friends" • "your (pl.) children" • "their boat", can mean "his", "her" or "their", but these different uses can still be distinguished, since causes lenition when used as "his" (), causes eclipsis when used as "their" (), and neither when used as "her" (). After certain numbers The numbers that trigger eclipsis (the noun being in the singular) are: • "seven horses" • "eight donkeys" • "nine cats" • "ten pens" After the preposition "in" Before a vowel is written instead of . • "in a house" • "in Ireland" Genitive plural nouns after the definite article The genitive plural article eclipses a following noun: • "of the donkeys" • "of the words" Dative singular nouns after the definite article In western and southern dialects, nouns beginning with a noncoronal consonant are eclipsed after combinations of preposition + article in the singular (except , , and , which trigger lenition) • "by the man" • "on the tree" After certain preverbal particles • "the hole that the rabbits come out of" • "Does he come every day?" • "Where are my glasses?" • "He said that he would come." • "if I had known that" ==Changes to vowel-initial words==
Changes to vowel-initial words
In environments where lenition occurs a vowel initial word remains unchanged: • "the night" (feminine singular nominative noun after definite article) • "of the water" (masculine singular genitive noun after definite article) • "from Scotland" (noun after leniting preposition) • "grandfather" (noun after preposed adjective: "old" + "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 (a voiceless coronal plosive) after the definite article: • "the water" (masculine singular nominative) Additionally, there is the prothetic (a voiceless glottal fricative), which occurs when both the following conditions are met: • a proclitic causes neither lenition nor eclipsis of consonants. • a proclitic itself ends in a vowel. Examples of h-prothesis: • "her age" (after possessive pronoun "her"; compare with , "his age" and , "their age" with regular urú) • "to Ireland" (after preposition "to, towards") • "with Antaine" (after preposition "with") • "of the night" (on feminine singular genitive noun after definite article) • "the birds" (on plural nominative/dative noun after definite article) • "as high as a castle" (after chomh "as") • "beautifully" (after adverb-forming particle ) • "Don't leave me!" (after negative imperative particle "don't") • "the second place" (after an ordinal numeral) ==References==
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