Let's try to pin him down on a price.
Among the changes, which took place in Dublin English in the 1990s (Hickey 1999), are the following four which are also found in general forms of American English: (a) use of retroflex /r/, in fork [fo:ɻk]; (b) use of an intervocalic alveolar tap, for example in water [wɑɾɚ]; (c) the horse/hoarse‐merger and (d) the which/witch‐merger.
base + -all → basall
Besides, how they do love to “take a fall out of” the bourgeois–épater is their word for it.
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