Brian O'Cathain wrote:
I would say that 30% was a genuine effort by native speakers to clean up the language for a modern world ie getting rid of superfluous dh's and gh's (there were very few Irish-language typewriters then and long before computers).
The problem is a great many of those dh's and gh's were far from superfluous. In many dialects and sub-dialects they were crucial for the accurate representation of the living language.
The caighdeán spelling reforms were based on blunt rules laid down to be applied across the board, with scant regard paid to the actual pronunciation of spoken Irish leaving us with an orthography which conflicts with the pronunciation of every Gaedhealtacht area (attempts to cobble together a 'Lárchanúint' to match the new written language clearly demonstrate this).
I see this as emblematic of a wider shift in focus away from native language, spoken and written, and towards the language of the 'professionals' (translators, civil servants, academics, etc.).
Most of the 'development' in recent decades has been increasingly centred around this group (generally people for whom Irish is a language into which English is translated) - their needs and their Irish.
Authentic Irish idiom and vocabulary gradually falls out of use, replaced by calques of English idiom and the many thousands of gaelicisations of English terminology introduced into Irish vocabulary. The thinking seems to be that for every word in the English dictionary, Irish must have a corresponding word with precisely the same semantic range. If it doesn't, that's a
fault in the Irish language, the remedy to which is the adoption of yet another English word. Job done!
I'd hate to come across as overly negative or critical. The existence of professionals who use the language (a large number of whom have a very high command of the language and genuine desire to benefit it in any way they can) is great, I have no issue with it. Rather it's the dominance of this group over Irish and its development, and their establishment of an artificial 'official standard' form of the language, which I object to.