Page:Aids to the Pronunciation of Irish - Christian Brothers.djvu/84

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The of is short in  &c, the  not being a vowel or liquid.

in Connaught, but in Munster. (Second syllable stressed in both cases).

91. In the digraph, when under tonic accent, is the vowel,  the glide, except in the cases mentioned below (Ulster, Munster, Connaught):—

92. When, under tonic accent, is followed by a labial or a guttural, the becomes a glide, and  the vowel (Ulster, Munster, Connaught).