ChatterBank1 min ago
Turd
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Why are a lot of Irish people selective about when they pronounce 'th', e.g. third being pronounced turd. But then would pronounce 'them' correctly in the same sentence?!?!?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My mother-in-law is Irish, from Wicklow, and has a lovely soft brogue, which can turn positively Paisley-esque when she gets cross!
She never says tird for third, but she often puts a 'TH' in words that don't have them, so 'Trentham' becomes 'Trentham,' and 'Thames' becomes 'Thems'
I think it's an unconcious speech pattern, rather than deliberate selection.
She never says tird for third, but she often puts a 'TH' in words that don't have them, so 'Trentham' becomes 'Trentham,' and 'Thames' becomes 'Thems'
I think it's an unconcious speech pattern, rather than deliberate selection.
as Quizmonkey says, there are two different ways of pronouncing th, 'voiced' and 'unvoiced' (say 'them' and you'll feel your voicebox in action; say 'thick' and all you'll hear is your breath being forced between tongue and teeth). In Old English there were 2 different letters for the 2 sounds, which I can't reproduce here, but now th does for both. Anyway, Irish pronunciation of an unvoiced th may indeed sound like a T.
Iankeela - there is no sound in French that requires you to put your tongue between your teeth, therefore the mouth is not trained to do that and it's very hard for a French native to suddenly learn a new physiological movement. It's how accents come about: we hear a 'new' sound in a foreign language and instead of pronouncing it correctly (as our articulation has never done it) we replace it with the nearest sound in our language. Hope that makes sense!