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Duolingo Irish Course Summary

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········ Table of Contents ········

 p1  * Basics 1		     * Prepositions 3
     * Basics 2		     * Passive
     * Common Phrases	     * Numbers
     * Food		     * Feelings and Traits
     * Plurals		 p5  * Verbs: Past 1
     * Eclipsis		     * Characteristics
 p2  * Lenition		     * Verbs: Past 2
  |  * Possessives	     * Verbal Noun
  |  * Verbs: Present 1	     * Ireland 2
  |  * Colors		     * Pronouns Reflexive
  |  * Questions	 p6  * Directions
  |  * Prepositions 1	     * Sport
 p3  * Ireland 1	     * Verbs: Future 1
     * Dates and Time	     * Imperative
     * Family		     * Verbs: Imperfect
     * Verbs: Present 2	     * Verbs: Conditional
     * Prepositions 2
     * Genitive Case
 p4  * Negatives
     * Comparison

Lenition

updated 2018-10-25

Welcome to the Lenition skill!

SĂ©imhiĂș (lenition) is where an extra h is added between the first and

second letters of a word in certain situations. This changes the

spelling and pronunciation of the word, but not the meaning. Only some

initial letters can be lenited: b, c, d, f, g, m, p, s, and t. Words

that begin with other letters do not undergo lenition at all.

Here are examples of words being lenited:

   Initial letter  Example  Lenition  Example
   b              buachaill bh       bhuachaill
   c              cailĂ­n    ch       chailĂ­n
   d              doras     dh       dhoras
   f              fuinneog  fh       fhuinneog
   g              geata     gh       gheata
   m              mĂĄla      mh       mhĂĄla
   p              poll      ph       pholl
   s              seomra    sh       sheomra
   t              teach     th       theach

Lenition is used in the following situations.

__________________________________________________________________

1. Feminine Nouns

Feminine nouns are lenited after the definite article an in the

nominative case.

Examples:

* mairteoil beef, an mhairteoil the beef

* bean woman, an bhean the woman

An exception to this rule is that feminine nouns beginning with d or t

are not lenited. Another exception is that nouns beginning with s

becomes ts if the s precedes a vowel, l, n or r.

Examples:

* an deasc the desk

* an traein the train

* an tsubh the jam

* an tslĂĄinte the health

* an tsnaidhm the knot

* an tsrĂĄid the street

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2. Feminine Adjectives

Singular feminine nouns cause lenition of the following adjective.

Examples:

* bean mhaith a good woman

* an mhairteoil dhearg the red beef

Note: Only when the adjective directly follows its noun.

__________________________________________________________________

3. Possessive Adjectives

Lenition occurs after mo my, do your, a his.

Examples:

* mo chara my friend

* do mhadra your dog

* a mhac his son

__________________________________________________________________

4. Numbers

Lenition occurs after the numbers one to six.

Examples:

* sé chapall six horses

* trí bhuidéal three bottles

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5. Vocative Case

The vocative case is used when directly addressing someone or

something, as in CĂĄ bhfuil tĂș, a chailĂ­n? Where are you, girl? Lenition

is used after the vocative particle a.

(Note that masculine nouns and names are also slenderised after the

vocative particle: fear becomes a fhir, and PĂłl becomes a PhĂłil.)

More on this case in a later skill.

__________________________________________________________________

6. Prepositions

Lenition occurs after the words ar on, de off, den off the, do to/for,

don to the, faoi under/about, Ăł from, roimh before, sa/san in the, trĂ­

through, um around/about.

Examples:

* don bhuachaill to the boy

* sa phĂĄirc in the field

An exception is that words beginning with d, t, s are not lenited after

den, don, sa or san.

Examples:

* den doras off the door

* sa teach in the house

* don sĂș to the juice

__________________________________________________________________

7. Other Words

Lenition is also used after the phrase nuair a when, the prefixes rĂł-

too and an- very, and the word mĂĄ if (unless the next word is a version

of tĂĄ or deir). Other special cases will be highlighted in other

lessons.

Examples:

* nuair a bhrisim when I break

* rĂł-mhĂłr too big

* an-mhaith very good

* mĂĄ dhĂșnann sĂ© if he closes

__________________________________________________________________

DeNTaLS-DoTS

This is a handy mnemonic! If a word begins with d, t or s and it would

normally be lenited according to the above rules, but the word that

came before it in the sentence ends with d, n, t, l or s, then the word

is not lenited.

Examples:

* den sagart off the priest

* an-te very hot

Phew! I hope that wasn't too complicated. It will start to make sense

when you see some more examples! Good luck and see you in the next

skill :D

Possessives

updated 2018-10-25

When possessives are used in Irish, certain changes occur to the

following word. There are two systems: one for words starting with a

consonant, and one for word starting with a vowel.

Words starting with a consonant

Here are the possessive adjectives and changes that occur when a word

begins with a consonant:

       English     Irish  Change    Example
   my              mo    lenition  mo chĂłta
   your (singular) do    lenition  do chĂłta
   his/its         a     lenition  a chĂłta
   her/its         a     no change a cĂłta
   our             ĂĄr    eclipsis  ĂĄr gcĂłta
   your (plural)   bhur  eclipsis  bhur gcĂłta
   their           a     eclipsis  a gcĂłta

Before words starting with fh + a vowel, mo and do are abbreviated to

m' and d', with no space before the next word.

Examples:

* fĂłn phone

* m'fhĂłn my phone

* d'fhĂłn your phone

If the word begins with a consonant that does not undergo lenition (or

eclipsis), the spelling remains unchanged.

Examples:

* léine shirt

* mo léine my shirt

* år léine our shirt

* a léine his/her/its/their shirt

Words starting with a vowel

Here are the possessive adjectives and changes that occur when a word

begins with a vowel:

   English        Irish  Change      Example
   my              m'    no change m'orĂĄiste
   your (singular) d'    no change d'orĂĄiste
   his/its         a     no change a orĂĄiste
   her/its         a     h         a horĂĄiste
   our             ĂĄr    n-        ĂĄr n-orĂĄiste
   your (plural)   bhur  n-        bhur n-orĂĄiste
   their           a     n-        a n-orĂĄiste

Instead of lenition or eclipsis, here you can see two other initial

letter mutations used in Irish: the h-prefix and the n-prefix.

* The h-prefix is used after the word a (when it means her). Note

that there is no hyphen.

* The n-prefix is used after ĂĄr, bhur, and a (when it means their).

Note the hyphen between the n- and the word.

You can also see from the examples above that m' and d are used instead

of mo or do, with no space before the next word.

A

The possessive adjective a can mean his, her, its or their. If you look

at the tables above, you can see how to identify which one is used. It

is usually clear from context, and from the word that follows the

possessive.

Verbs: Present 1

updated 2018-10-25

In Irish, it is important to note that there are two present tenses:

the present, and the present habitual. The present describes what one

is doing (right now) and the present habitual is used to describe what

one does (every day, every week, and so on).

In this skill you will learn verbs in the present habitual. You

previously met the endings for conjugating regular verbs in the present

habitual tense in Basics 2. But, lets revisit them here.

1. The first conjugation

These verbs have only one syllableÂč, and the root form seen in the

dictionary is identical to the stem used for verb conjugation. In the

present tense the ending is, generally, added directly onto the stem.

Examples are dĂșn ("close"), Ăłl ("drink"), bris ("break")

      Pronoun     Broad ending   Example   Slender ending    Example
   I              -aimÂč        dĂșnaim      -imÂČ           brisim
   you (singular) -ann tĂș      dĂșnann tĂș   -eann tĂș       briseann tĂș
   he/it          -ann sĂ©      dĂșnann sĂ©   -eann sĂ©       briseann sĂ©
   she/it         -ann sĂ­      dĂșnann sĂ­   -eann sĂ­       briseann sĂ­
   we             -aimidÂč      dĂșnaimid    -imidÂČ         brisimid
   you (plural)   -ann sibh    dĂșnann sibh -eann sibh     briseann sibh
   they           -ann siad    dĂșnann siad -eann siad     briseann siad

ÂčThere is a small handful of first conjugation verbs that have more

than one syllable. They aren't considered irregular- just a bit odd.

These will be dealt with later.

ÂČIn present tense verbs, mĂ© and muid are generally not used; instead,

they are incorporated into the verb that precedes it, to make what is

known as the "synthetic form".

Examples:

* dĂșnaim I close

* dĂșnann sĂ© he closes

* brisim I break

* briseann sé he breaks

__________________________________________________________________

2. The second conjugation

These verbs have more than one syllable.

Many end in -aigh and -igh in the root form seen in the dictionary; to

get the stem used for conjugation, the last syllable of the root is

removed (i.e. remove the -aigh/-igh). The endings are then added to

that stem. Examples include ceannaigh buy, bailigh collect. The stems

for these would be ceann- and bail-.

Others end in -ail/-il, -ain/-in, -ais/-is or -air/-ir. To get the

stem, the last syllable of the root is removed but the very last letter

is kept, and then the appropriate ending is added. Examples include

inis tell and oscail open. The stems for these would be ins- and oscl-.

      Pronoun     Broad ending    Example     Slender ending    Example
   I              -aĂ­m         osclaĂ­m        -Ă­m            bailĂ­m
   you (singular) -aĂ­onn tĂș    osclaĂ­onn tĂș   -Ă­onn tĂș       bailĂ­onn tĂș
   he/it          -aíonn sé    osclaíonn sé   -íonn sé       bailíonn sé
   she/it         -aĂ­onn sĂ­    osclaĂ­onn sĂ­   -Ă­onn sĂ­       bailĂ­onn sĂ­
   we             -aĂ­mid       osclaĂ­mid      -Ă­mid          bailĂ­mid
   you (plural)   -aĂ­onn sibh  osclaĂ­onn sibh -Ă­onn sibh     bailĂ­onn sibh
   they           -aĂ­onn siad  osclaĂ­onn siad -Ă­onn siad     bailĂ­onn siad

Examples:

* bailĂ­onn tĂș you collect

* ceannaĂ­mid / ceannaĂ­onn muid we buy

* insĂ­m I tell

* osclaĂ­onn sibh you open

__________________________________________________________________

3. Irregular verbs

The last group of verbs in Irish are the irregular verbs. There are

only 11 of these. Some of them appear quite regular most of the time,

but all of them have at least one tense in which they don't obey the

standard rules, so it is necessary to memorise these 11 verbs in all

their forms and tenses!

The question form

To ask a question in this tense using a verb, you use the question word

an and add an eclipsis (urĂș) to the verb if possible.

Examples:

* DĂșnann tĂș You close

* An ndĂșnann tĂș? Do you close?

* Briseann sĂ­ She breaks

* An mbriseann sĂ­? Does she break?

The irregular verb bĂ­ be is an exception:

* TĂĄ tĂș You are

* An bhfuil tĂș? Are you?

* TĂĄimid We are

* An bhfuilimid? Are we?

The negative form

To put a verb in the present habitual tense into the negative form, you

use the negation word nĂ­ and add a lenition (sĂ©imhiĂș) to the verb if

possible.

Examples:

* DĂșnann tĂș You close

* NĂ­ dhĂșnann tĂș You do not close

* Briseann tĂș You break

* NĂ­ bhriseann sĂ­ She does not break

Again, the verb bĂ­ is an exception in this tense, as well as the verb

abair say:

BĂ­

* TĂĄ tĂș You are

* NĂ­l tĂș? You are not

* TĂĄimid We are

* NĂ­limid? We are not

Abair

* Deir tĂș You say

* NĂ­ deir tĂș You do not say

* Deirimid We say

* NĂ­ deirimid We do not say

Yes or No?

Irish has no word for "yes" or "no". That means when someone asks a

questions using a verb like those above, you either answer with the

positive form of the verb (the standard conjugated form) or the

negative form (as seen above)

Example:

* An ndĂșnann tĂș an doras? Do you close the door?

* DĂșnaim (an doras) Yes, I close the door. (literally just "I close

(the door)")

* NĂ­ dhĂșnaim (an doras) No, I do not close the door (literally just

"I do not close (the door)")

Colors

updated 2018-10-25

Adjectives (such as colors) generally come after the noun in Irish.

Their spelling is modified so that they agree with the noun, in number

and in gender.

Masculine singular nouns

An adjective that follows a masculine singular noun does not change

(for example, an bosca dubh the black box).

Feminine singular nouns

An adjective that follows a feminine singular noun is lenited if

possible (for example, an eilifint dhubh the black elephant).

Plural nouns

An adjective that follows a plural noun has its spelling changed to the

plural form of that adjective. If the noun ends with a slender

consonant, the adjective is also lenited.

What is a slender consonant? A slender consonant is a consonant with a

slender vowel (e Ă© or i Ă­) next to it. For example, in the word beoir,

r is a slender consonant.

Getting Descriptive

In this skill, we give you the basic vocabulary to describe most of the

colours. One fun quirk in Irish is that there aren't of lots of words

for all the different shades on the spectrum. Instead, you describe a

particular colour by naming something that has that colour, or adding

some detail (such as another colour!). So for example, you could

distinguish something that is spéirghorm sky-blue from something that

is gormghlas blue-green, or contrast dearg red with bĂĄndearg pink

(literally white-red). Use the vocabulary you learn and get creative to

think of how you could say things like 'blood-red', and 'forest green'!

Questions

updated 2018-10-25

C question words

When asking a question in English, you generally use a W question word

such as who, where, what. Similarly, in Irish you generally use a C

question word such as cé, cå, cad.

Here are some examples of C question words:

         English                   Irish
   who                 cé
   what                cad / céard
   which               cén
   where               cĂĄ
   when                cathain
   what time           cén uair / cå huair / cén t-am
   whose               cé leis
   what place          cå håit / cén åit
   why                 cén fåth
   how                 conas / cad Ă© mar
   how many / how much cé mhéad / cå mhéad

Yes and no

There is no direct translation for the words yes and no in Irish. Where

in English you would use these words to answer a question, in Irish you

repeat the verb from the original question in either the positive or

the negative form. (You can choose to omit the pronoun if you like -

unless you are using a synthetic form of the verb.)

Examples:

* Do you play soccer? Yes. = Do you play soccer? I play. = An imrĂ­onn

tĂș sacar? ImrĂ­m.

* Do you eat cheese? No. = Do you eat cheese? I do not eat. = An

itheann tĂș cĂĄis? NĂ­ ithim.

* Does she work in the city? Yes. = Does she work in the city? She

works. = An oibrĂ­onn sĂ­ sa chathair? OibrĂ­onn (sĂ­).

* Do the children listen to you? No. = Do the children listen to you?

They do not listen. = An Ă©isteann na pĂĄistĂ­ leat? NĂ­ Ă©isteann

(siad).

Prepositions 1

updated 2018-12-30

Prepositions (réamhfhocail) are short words that express relationships

between things, like to, for, with, on, between.

In Irish most prepositions are usually written on their own, but when

you use them together with a pronoun (me, you, he, she, it, us, them),

the two words get contracted together to make what are known as

prepositional pronouns (forainmneacha réamhfhoclacha).

Here are five prepositional pronouns in all their forms:

   Pronoun       on   with   at    from  to, toward/s
   (none)         ar     le   ag     Ăł      chun (chuig)
   me             orm    liom agam   uaim   chugam
   you (singular) ort    leat agat   uait   chugat
   he, it         air    leis aige   uaidh  chuige
   she, it        uirthi léi  aici   uaithi chuici
   us             orainn linn againn uainn  chugainn
   you (plural)   oraibh libh agaibh uaibh  chugaibh
   them           orthu  leo  acu    uathu  chucu

Examples:

* TĂĄ an fear liom The man is with me

* Ritheann an cailĂ­n chuici The girl runs to/toward/towards her

When used in specific ways, some prepositions have special idiomatic

meanings in Irish. You already met the idiomatic use of ag to mean have

in Basics 2; here are some other examples.

__________________________________________________________________

Ar

The basic meaning of this word is on. For example, Ritheann sé ar

bhĂłthar means He runs on a road.

When used with the verb bĂ­, it conveys the idea of obligation to do

something. For example, TĂĄ orm rith means I must run. (The literal

translation of the phrase would be "It is on me to run".)

* TĂĄ ort snĂĄmh You must swim

* TĂĄ ar PhĂłl Ă©isteacht Paul must listen

* TĂĄ orthu siĂșl They must walk

__________________________________________________________________

Ó

The basic meaning of this word is from. For example, Ritheann sé ó

theach means He runs from a house.

When used with the verb bĂ­, it conveys the idea of wanting something.

For example, TĂĄ bia uaim means I want food. (The literal translation of

the phrase would be "food is from me".)

* An bhfuil léine uait? Do you want a shirt?

* TĂĄ madraĂ­ uaidh He wants dogs

* TĂĄ uathu siĂșl They want to walk

* TĂĄ Ășll Ăł PhĂłl Paul wants an apple

* TĂĄ na pĂĄistĂ­ Ăł bhean A woman wants the children

Another way to express wanting something is to use the verb teastaigh

(to be wanted/needed), followed by a version of Ăł. Written this way,

TeastaĂ­onn bia uaim is the alternative way to say I want food; it can

also mean I need food. (A literal translation would be "food is needed

from me".)

* TeastaĂ­onn na leabhair uaithi She wants/needs the books

* TeastaĂ­onn seaclĂĄid uainn We want/need chocolate

* TeastaĂ­onn uaim snĂĄmh I want/need to swim

* TeastaĂ­onn cĂĄca Ăł chailĂ­n A girl wants/needs a cake

* An dteastaĂ­onn na hataĂ­? Are the hats needed?

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