Accents of Ireland: Northern Irish Accent •Northern Irish •Southern Irish •Dublin •West of Ireland •etc. Guide to Irish Accents Northern Irish Accent •Vowel features •Consonant features •Intonation and prosody Vowel features: differences in pronunciation (Julišová 2013 based on Wells, Accents 120 and 438) Vowel features Monophthongs: •/e/ -> [ɛ] •/ɒ/ -> [ɔ] or [o] •/ɪ/ -> [i] •/ʊ/ -> [u] Diphthongs: •/eɪ/ -> [ε:] in final position •Pre-consonantally /eɪ/ -> [εə] or [iə] •/aɪ/ -> [əi] •realization of the /aʊ/ diphthog Vowel features: vowel length •diff. accents of En. language -> pronounce the same phoneme /ɪ/ slightly longer in kid than in kit -> in NIr accent -> the contrast in vowel length is lost •Ulster Lengthening = vowel length for /ɛ, a, ɔ/ if used word-finally or before any consonant than /p, t, ʧ, k/ -> longer allophones are used -> /bed/ -> [bε:d] Consonant features •strong rhoticity -> “r” pronounced more prominently, esp. at the end of words and before consonants -> eg. 'career' •lack of dark /l/ •Elision: /mother/ -> [ma:ər] or [mɔ:ər] /d/ -> lost completely in /hand/ or /old/ /l/ -> in the final position in /call/ or /full/ •Glottalization Intonation •rising / falling intonation patterns •High rising terminal (HRT) •the voice-pitch is continually rising and falling Derry Girls Derry girls being hilarious Sources: •Hickey, R. (2004). The phonology of Irish English. Handbook of varieties of English, 1, 68-97. •McCafferty, K. (1998). Shared accents, divided speech community? Change in Northern Ireland English. Language Variation and Change, 10(2), 97-121. •https://dspace.cuni.cz/bitstream/handle/20.500.11956/53716/DPTX_2013_1_11410_0_330031_0_95958.pdf? sequence=1&isAllowed=y •https://www.voiceoverguy.co.uk/guide-to-a-northern-irish-accent •