Top Banner
INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015
14

INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

Jan 03, 2016

Download

Documents

Toby Gallagher
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT

Mainstage 2015

Page 2: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

HOMEWORK: I LOVE BEING IRISH.

Page 3: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

CLIP ONE

WRITE DOWN ANYTHING YOU NOTICE ABOUT HOW THE ACTOR SPEAKS. TAKE NOTE OF THINGS THAT MAKES HIS ACCENT DIFFERENT THAN A STANDARD AMERICAN ACCENT.

Page 4: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

WHERE IS IRELAND?

Page 5: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

WORLD

Page 6: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

EUROPE

Page 7: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

BRITISH ISLES

Page 8: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

WHERE IS THE MIDLANDS?

Page 9: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

IRELAND

Page 10: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

CITIES

Page 11: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

SOME HELPFUL VOCAB! PHONETICS: THE STUDY OF SPEECH SOUNDS VOWELS: AN OPEN SPEECH SOUND (A, E, I,

O, U, Y) CONSONANTS: A PARTIALLY OBSTRUCTED

SPEECH SOUND (ALL OTHER LETTERS) MONOPHTHONG: SINGULAR VOWEL SOUND

(TEETH, BIRD, POD) DIPHTHONG: A VOWEL CLUSTER; TWO

VOWEL SOUNDS IN ONE SYLLABLE (SOUTH, VOICE, ICE, LOUD, BEARD)

TRIPHTHONG: A VOWEL CLUSTER; THREE VOWEL SOUNDS IN ONE SYLLABLE (HOUR, FIRE, LOYAL)

Page 12: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

PHONETICS OF MIDLANDS IRISH ACCENT

Page 13: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.
Page 14: INTRO TO THE IRISH MIDLANDS DIALECT Mainstage 2015.

PHONETICS CONTINUED The dipthong in kite often starts from a centralized place: IPA kəit. To American and British ears, kite can sound a bit like “koyt.”

KITE KOYT The diphthong in mouth is often fronted to something like IPA ɛu or æu or ɜu, among other variants. Hence mouth can sound like “meh-ooth.”

MOUTH MEH-OOTH Th becomes IPA t and d in words like thing and this (i.e. “tin” and “dis”).

THING TIN THIS DIS