Studies of accommodation between different dialects have to a greater
or lesser extent focused on languages with a spoken standard or a socially
prestigious dialect. Irish (Gaelic) has no spoken standard, nor can any of
the three major spoken dialects be considered more socially prestigious
than the others. This article reports on a pilot study that explores
cross-dialect speaker interaction in a task-oriented context focusing
primarily on prosodically induced effects on prominence and duration.
Although accommodation was not found on a large scale in the synchronous
speech task involved, interaction among various pairs of speakers raised
interesting questions, both linguistic (e.g., what level of linguistic
detail is perceptually relevant) and methodological (e.g., how best to
study linguistic interaction between speakers from noncontiguous dialect
areas when there is no standard dialect).I
would like to thank Fred Cummins whose work on synchronic speech inspired
the present study and who assisted in the recording. I would also like to
thank Jaye Padgett, Lillis Ó Laoire, Diarmuid Ó Sé,
and two anonymous reviewers for valuable comments on an earlier
version.