An diofar eadar na mùthaidhean a rinneadh air "Intrusive T or Why we're writing sròn not *stròn"

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Ermm ... for the sake of all our sanity, I'll keep the explanation of *why* short.  Phonetically, [r] and [d] are quite similar to each other - both are articulated at the same place using the tip of your tongue, the only difference really is the length of contact. Plus, because Gaelic only does that in <span style="color: #008000;">sr</span> clusters, there's an added articulatory reason.
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Ermm ... for the sake of all our sanity, I'll keep the explanation of *why* short.  Phonetically, [r] and [d] are quite similar to each other - both are articulated at the same place using the tip of your tongue, the only difference really is the length of contact.
  
Actually, just taking a quick trip round the world, languages often change [d] into [r], and vice versa. In American English for example the ''-tt-'' between vowels has become much like [r] in words like ''matted, butter'', and so on. Anyway.
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Actually, just taking a quick trip round the world, languages often change [d] into [r], and vice versa. In American English for example the ''-tt-'' between vowels has become much like [r] in words like ''matted, butter'', and so on. So it's quite common for funny stuff to happen between or around r and d sounds. Let's just leave it at that.
  
 
So Gaelic introduces a [d] sound in <span style="color: #008000;">sr</span> clusters, but doesn't replace the <span style="color: #008000;">r</span>. It's the northern dialects that do this, as you can see on the map.
 
So Gaelic introduces a [d] sound in <span style="color: #008000;">sr</span> clusters, but doesn't replace the <span style="color: #008000;">r</span>. It's the northern dialects that do this, as you can see on the map.

Mùthadh on 23:08, 30 dhen Iuchar 2013

Ermm ... for the sake of all our sanity, I'll keep the explanation of *why* short. Phonetically, [r] and [d] are quite similar to each other - both are articulated at the same place using the tip of your tongue, the only difference really is the length of contact.

Actually, just taking a quick trip round the world, languages often change [d] into [r], and vice versa. In American English for example the -tt- between vowels has become much like [r] in words like matted, butter, and so on. So it's quite common for funny stuff to happen between or around r and d sounds. Let's just leave it at that.

So Gaelic introduces a [d] sound in sr clusters, but doesn't replace the r. It's the northern dialects that do this, as you can see on the map.

[sdrɔːn] vs [srɔːn] in Scottish Gaelic dialects

This gives rise to a never ending stream of discussions about spelling. Is it sruth, struth or even *sdruth? The answer is complicated. A quick cross-check with Irish and Old Irish tells us that indeed there was no such sound many moons ago:

Old Irish Irish Gaelic
srath srath [srah] srath [sdrah]
srón srón [sroːn] sròn [sdrɔːn]
sreth sreath [srah] sreath [sdrɛh]

So what's the problem? Twofold, really. The [sdr] pronunciation has been dominant for so long that it's started to creep into the spelling, bit by bit. And with overall literacy rates in Gaelic dropping and dropping over the centuries, people have followed the conventions less and their ears more. Similar to the slochd/sloc problem.

But the main problems are lenition and loanwords. Loanwords, like strì or stràbh show one peculiarity. Unlike sròn and srath, you can't lenite them:

sròn mo shròn
srath mo shrath
strì mo strì
stràbh mo stràbh

So, the neat solution is, if you can't lenite it, spell it str. And if you can lenite it, spell it sr. You'll end up mostly with loanwords on the str side and mostly with native Gaelic words on the sr side. So, as a rule of thumb, if it looks a bit like an English word, it probably has unlenitable [sdr] and should be spelled str.

Beagan gràmair
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