Phonemic transcription and Irish
Brian Doyle
brian at GAEL-IMAGE.COM
Wed Jan 2 15:59:01 UTC 2008
I am drafting my master's thesis, the subject of which is the
sociolinguistics of Irish orthographic reform. Every scientific text
on Modern Irish uses a phonemic transcription convention that many of
us know from dictionaries such as Foclóir Póca, which is to use an
apostrophe to mark palatalization and leave velarization unmarked.
For example:
bean /b'an/ 'woman'
bán /ba:n/ 'white'
However, I.P.A. designates a superscript "j" and superscript lower-
case "gamma" symbol to mark palatalization and velarization,
respectively. Of course, I can't display this easily in email but the
following link displays what I mean in the box labeled "diacritics,"
under "secondary articulation":
http://www.omniglot.com/writing/ipa.htm
The word processor that I am using to write my thesis can render
I.P.A. So, my question is this:
Which transcription method should I use for a scientific paper on
Celtic linguistics? And why is it that no scholarly articles on Irish
linguistics (at least not the ones I have found) use the I.P.A.
convention?
Le gach dea-ghuí,
Brian Doyle
M.A. Candidate, Linguistics
Northeastern Illinois University
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