Gréasaghas wrote:
shiúlaigh: I hear [ˈhúlˠəgʲ].
When slender initial s is followed by a broad vowel, aspiration normally changes it to slender ch (TYI p. 10), so in this case [ˈxʲú:lˠəgʲ] = [ˈçú:lˠəgʲ]. BUT I don't know about Kerry.
There are only a very few words in CDh with a lenited
sh pronounced as
ch.
Gréasaghas wrote:
thoil: [hɔlʲ]. Good, AFAIK. Can be also more fronted [hɞlʲ]. Cf. scoil (I don't have a recording at hand atm).
dhlí: I heard [jʲlʲi:vʲ].
thoil can be like
thoil,
theil,
thuil.
Maybe:
dhlí a bheidh -->
dhlí ' bheidh -->
dhlí ' bh...?
Gréasaghas wrote:
don lucht: I hear "do-nuch" [dən̪ˠʊxˠ]. 2 things: n+l--> n (N?) and disappearance of t before n. Sandhi I don't know about?
Yes, the final part of a consonant cluster can be omitted when preceding a consonant of a similar articulatory position.
Gréasaghas wrote:
ní éireóidh: I heard 'ní dh'éireóidh'
lucht neamhdhiaga: I heard 'luch…'
arís: I heard 'aidíst'.
Particles that cause lenition on consonants often cause
dh' to be prefixed to vowels. See this thread:
viewtopic.php?f=28&t=8366&p=54356&hilit=dh%27&sid=f4b29987944db92e63246ca2ee45190c#p54356.
I might have over-corrected the slender
r in
airíst. I'm used to it being broad in Kerry.