Initial High Front Vowels or Where the j in eòrna comes from
Actually this isn't so much about where an initial glide, the [j], comes from but rather how you can tell when it's there and when it isn't.
In a nutshell, it appears when you have a word with an initial high front vowel followed by a back vowel. Which means what exactly?
High front vowels are [i] and [e] in Gaelic, back vowels are [a] [o] [ɤ] [ɔ] [u] and [ɯ]. So if you get any combination of those two (in the said order), you get an initial glide, the [j]. Don't confuse this [j] with the [ʝ] sound (slender gh and dh). The [j] has much less friction and it's a sound you actually get in English words - year, yarn, yen etc.
A few examples:
| eòrna | [jɔːRNə] |
| iolaire | [juLɪrʲə] |
| Eòghann | [jɔː.əN] |
| iubhar | [ju.əɾ] |
| eallach | [jaLəx] |
| eòin | [jɔː.Nʲ] |
| ionnsaich | [jũːNsɪç] |
| earrach | [jaRəx] |
| eòlas | [jɔːLəs] |
Unfortunately, this rule doesn't always work and you get words like iorram [iRəm]. The short answer to this problem is related to Old Irish. So the best way of dealing with this is to expect a [j] glide when you get e or i before a back vowel, especially if the first syllable contains a long vowel, and learn when the exceptions apply.
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