- séimhiú [ˈʃeːvʲuː]) and
eclipsis (urú [ˈʊɾˠuː]) (the
alternative names,
aspiration for
lenition and
nasalisation for
eclipsis, are also used, but those...
-
unless otherwise stated (⟨ij⟩
becomes ⟨IJ⟩ in Dutch, and
digraphs marking eclipsis in Irish, are
capitalised on the
second letter, i.e. ⟨mb⟩
becomes ⟨mB⟩)...
-
Bilingual sign in Ireland. The
eclipsis of P to bP uses
lower case in an
otherwise all-caps text....
-
Eclipsis is a
genus of
robber flies in the
family Asilidae.
There is at
least one
described species in
Eclipsis, E. maculiventris. "Browse
Eclipsis"....
-
article has two forms: an and na. An may
cause lenition,
eclipsis, or neither. Na may
cause eclipsis, but the only
instance of
lenition with na is with the...
-
nouns in the
dative in
these cases).
Eclipsis of ⟨f⟩
after sa: sa bhfeirm, "in the farm",
instead of san fheirm.
Eclipsis of ⟨t⟩ and ⟨d⟩
after preposition...
- and /fʲ/ are deleted. The
following tables show how
eclipsis affects the
start of words.
Eclipsis is
represented in the
orthography by
adding a letter...
-
difference between Irish and
Scottish Gaelic is that the
phenomenon of
eclipsis in
Irish is
diachronic (i.e. the
result of a
historical word-final nasal...
- the
eclipsis consonants also
denoted with a superdot: ṁ, ṅ. Old
Irish digraphs include the
lenition consonants: ch, fh, th, ph, sh, the
eclipsis consonants:...
- mutations:
lenition and
eclipsis,
found on
nouns and
verbs in a
variety of environments;
adjectives can
undergo lenition but not
eclipsis. In the late spoken...