Irish grammar


This article discusses the grammar of the Irish language.
The morphology of Irish is in some respects typical of an Indo-European language. Nouns are declined for number and case, and verbs for person and number. Nouns are classified by masculine or feminine gender. Other aspects of Irish morphology, while typical for an Insular Celtic language, are not typical for Indo-European, such as the presence of inflected prepositions and the initial consonant mutations. Irish syntax is also rather different from that of most Indo-European languages, due to its use of the verb–subject–object word order.

Syntax

Word order in Irish is of the form VSO so that, for example, "He hit me" is Bhuail sé mé .
One distinctive aspect of Irish is the distinction between is, the copula, and . Is describes identity or quality in a permanence sense, while temporary aspects are described by . This is similar to the difference between the verbs ser and estar in Spanish and Portuguese, although this is not an exact match; is and are cognate respectively with the Spanish es and está.
Examples are:
Irish is an inflected language, having four cases: ainmneach, gairmeach, ginideach and tabharthach. The prepositional case is called the dative by convention.
Irish nouns are masculine or feminine. To a certain degree the gender difference is indicated by specific word endings, -án and -ín being masculine and -óg feminine. While the neuter has mostly disappeared from vocabulary, the neuter gender is seen in various place names in Ireland.

Articles

The Irish definite 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 genitive singular of the word céad meaning first. An is used in the common case singular for all nouns, and lenites feminine nouns. In the genitive singular, an with lenition is used with masculine nouns, na with feminine nouns. In the dative singular, an may cause lenition or eclipsis depending on the preposition preceding it and on regional norms. Na is the only plural form of the article; it causes eclipsis in the genitive for both genders, and no mutation in other cases.
There is no indefinite article in Irish; the word appears by itself, for example: Tá peann agam. - "I have a pen", Tá madra sa seomra. - "There's a dog in the room".

Adjectives

Irish adjectives always follow the noun. The adjective is influenced by the case, number and gender of the noun preceding it.
Adjectives in Irish have two morphological degrees of comparison: the positive, e.g. Tá an buachaill cairdiúil "the boy is friendly", and the comparative, e.g. Tá an cailín níos cairdiúla ná an buachaill "the girl is nicer than the boy". A superlative sense is rendered by the comparative in a relative clause, e.g. Is é Seán an páiste is cairdiúla den triúr "Seán is the nicest child of the three".

Verbs

There are two conjugations and 11 irregular verbs. Tenses or moods are formed by inflecting the stem, and in the past and habitual past tenses and the conditional mood also by leniting any initial consonant. The inflected tense and mood forms are: present indicative, present habitual indicative, future, past indicative, past habitual indicative, conditional, imperative, present subjunctive, and past subjunctive. Verbs also have a verbal noun and past participle, and progressive constructions similar to those using the English present participle may be formed from the verbal noun and an appropriate tense of . Examples of tense conjugations: :
In addition to the passive voice, there is the impersonal form of the verb, termed the saorbhriathar or "autonomous verb", which serves a similar function.
Verbs can be conjugated either synthetically or analytically. However, the official standard generally prescribes the analytic form in most person-tense combinations, and the synthetic in only some cases, such as the first person plural. The analytic forms are also generally preferred in the western and northern dialects, except in answer to what would in English be "yes/no" questions, while Munster Irish prefers the synthetic forms. For example, the following are the standard form, synthetic form and analytical form of the past tense of rith "to run":

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

Personal pronouns in Irish do not inflect for case, but there are three different sets of pronouns used: conjunctive forms, disjunctive forms, and emphatic forms

Conjunctive forms

The normal word order in Irish is verb–subject–object. The forms of the subject pronoun directly following the verb are called conjunctive:
PersonSingularPlural
1st
2ndsibh
3rdmasc. sé
fem. sí
siad

The form muid in the 1st person plural is not used in the standard language, but is very common in western and northern dialects. The standard and southern dialects have no subject pronoun in the 1st person plural, using the synthetic verb ending -imíd instead.
Irish has no T–V distinction, i.e. it does not differentiate between formal and familiar forms of second person pronouns. The difference between tú and sibh is purely one of number.
There is no equivalent to the English "it", either "sé" or "sí" are used depending on whether the thing the speaker is referring to is a masculine noun or a feminine noun. The exception is the pronoun ea, used in impersonal copula phrases, particularly in the phrases is ea "yes", "so", "that is so", ní hea, nach ea? "is that not so?", an ea "Is that so?", fear is ea é "it's a man", and so on.

Disjunctive forms

If a pronoun is not the subject or if a subject pronoun does not follow the verb, the so-called disjunctive forms are used:
PersonSingularPlural
1stsinn, muid
2ndthúsibh
3rdmasc. é;
fem. í
iad

In Munster dialects the form thú is either archaic or is only found after words ending in a vowel.
;Standard:Buailim thú, Bhuail mé thú
;Dialect type :Buailim tú, Bhuail mé tú
;Dialect type :Buailim tú, Bhuail mé thú

Intensive forms

Irish also has intensive pronouns, used to give the pronouns a bit more weight or emphasis.
PersonSingularPlural
1stmisemuidne, sinne
2ndtusasibhse
3rdmasc. eisean
fem. ise
iadsan

The forms thusa, eisean and ise are disjunctive forms, while tusa, seisean and sise are conjunctive forms.
The word féin "-self" can follow a pronoun, either to add emphasis or to form a reflexive pronoun.

Possessive determiners

The possessive determiners cause different initial consonant mutations.
mo "my" lenites; m’ precedes vowels
do "your " lenites; d’ precedes vowels
a "his" lenites
a "her" takes the radical of a consonant and adds an h to a vowel
ár "our" eclipses
bhur "your " eclipses
a "their" eclipses
The forms a and ár can also blend with certain prepositions:
de & dodá chara "from/to his friend"
dá feirm "from/to her farm"
dár n-athair "from/to our father"
dá n-athair "from/to their father"
faoifaoina chara "about his friend"
faoinár n-athair "about our father"
iina feirm "in her farm"
inár bhfeirm "in our farm"
lelena n-athair "with their father"
lenár bpáiste "with our child"
óóna bhean "from his wife"
ónár dtaighde "from our research"
trítrína cos "through her foot"
trínár dteach "through our house"

The object of a verbal noun is in the genitive case:
Similarly, if the object of the verbal noun is a pronoun, then it is a possessive pronoun:
More examples:
Interrogative pronouns introduce a question, e.g. the words who, what, which. The Irish equivalents are:
Examples:
As the object of a preposition, a pronoun is fused with the preposition; one speaks here of "inflected" prepositions, or, as they are more commonly termed, prepositional pronouns.
1agam "at me"againn "at us"
2agat "at you "agaibh "at you "
3aige "at him"
aici "at her"
acu "at them"

1ormorainn
2ortoraibh
3air
uirthi
orthu

1asamasainn
2asatasaibh
3as
aisti
astu

1chugamchugainn
2chugatchugaibh
3chuige
chuici
chucu

1díomdínn
2díotdíbh
3de
di
díobh

1domdúinn
2duitdaoibh
3
di
dóibh

1fúmfúinn
2fútfúibh
3faoi
fúithi
fúthu

1ionamionainn
2ionationaibh
3ann
inti
iontu

1idir méeadrainn
2idir thúeadraibh
3idir é
idir í
eatarthu

1liomlinn
2leatlibh
3leis
léi
leo

1uaimuainn
2uaituaibh
3uaidh
uaithi
uathu

1romhamromhainn
2romhatromhaibh
3roimhe
roimpi
rompu

1tharamtharainn
2tharattharaibh
3thairis
thairsti
tharstu

1tríomtrínn
2tríottríbh
3tríd
tríthi
tríothu

1umamumainn
2umatumaibh
3uime
uimpi
umpu

Numbers

Cardinal numbers

There are three kinds of cardinal numbers in Irish: disjunctive numbers, nonhuman conjunctive numbers, and human conjunctive numbers.

Disjunctive numbers

These numbers are used for example in arithmetic, in telling time, in telephone numbers and after nouns in forms like bus a trí déag "bus 13" or seomra a dó "room 2".

Nonhuman conjunctive numbers

These numbers are used to count nouns that do not refer to human beings, e.g. capall "horse"
"One" as a pronoun is rendered with ceann when it concerns things and animals, e.g.:

Human conjunctive numbers

These numbers are used to count nouns that refer to human beings, e.g. páiste 'child'
"One" as a pronoun is rendered with duine with people. The other "personal" numbers can also be used pronominally, e.g.:
Higher numbers are done as with the nonhuman conjunctive numbers: trí pháiste déag, fiche páiste, etc.

Ordinal numbers

Phonology

A notable feature of Irish phonology is that consonants come in pairs, one "broad" and one "slender".
FrontCentralBack
Close
Near-close
Close-mid
Mid
Open-mid
Open

Diphthongs:,,,.