Morphophonology
Initial mutations
In the system of initial consonant mutations, the initial consonant of a word is modified in one or another way, depending on the nature of the preceding word: ''la tech'' "towards a house" vs. ''fo thech'' "under a house", ''i tech'' "into a house", with the alternation in the initial consonant of ''tech'' "house" triggered by the preceding preposition. There are three types of mutation: * Lenition, a weakening of the initial consonant. This generally turns plosives into fricatives, among other effects. * Nasalisation, originally a prepending of a nasal consonant to the word, which caused further changes. * Aspiration and gemination, causing either gemination of the initial consonant, or the insertion of . The mutations became an important part of the grammar and remain, with little change, in Modern Irish (seeLenition
Lenition is the weakening of a consonant according to a particular pattern. It applied to consonants appearing between vowels in Primitive Irish. When a preceding word ended in a vowel, the first consonant of the following word was lenited. Lenition was not indicated in the spelling except in the case of initial voiceless stops, which were written ''ph th ch'' when lenited. In later Old Irish, initial ''f s'' come to be written ''ḟ ṡ'' when lenited, with a dot (a so-called ''punctum delens'') above the letter. Lenition occurs after: * Certain case forms within a noun phrase, either of the noun or a preceding article or possessive. These include, at least: ** Nominative and vocative singular of all feminines ** Dative singular of all genders ** Nominative, vocative, accusative and genitive dual of all masculines and feminines ** Nominative, vocative and accusative plural of all neuters (but inconsistently after ''-a'') * Certain prepositions * Certain conjunctions * Certain infixed pronounsNasalisation
Nasalisation, also known as eclipsis in Modern Irish grammar, is the prepending of a nasal consonant to the word. It was caused by a preceding word ending in a nasal consonant. Due to later changes involving clusters of nasals and other consonants, in particular the coalescing of nasal-stop clusters to voiced plosives (such as > ), nasalisation may also manifest itself as voicing in Old Irish. Nasalisation was not indicated in the spelling except for initial voiced stops and vowels, where ''n-'' is prefixed (''m-'' before ''b''). Nasalisation occurs after: * Certain case forms within a noun phrase, either of the noun or a preceding article or possessive. These include, at least: ** Nominative, vocative and accusative singular and dual of all neuters ** Accusative singular of all masculines and feminines ** Genitive plural of all genders * Certain prepositions * Certain conjunctions * Certain infixed pronounsAspiration and gemination
Originally two different effects, aspiration and gemination came to be triggered in the same environments and thus can be treated as one type of mutation. Aspiration involved prepending an additional to a vowel-initial word. It was primarily caused by syllables formerly ending in , which lenited to between vowels. In gemination, an initial consonant was geminated by a preceding word originally ending in , or after a vowel. By analogy, words originally ending in and came to aspiration before vowel-initial words as well. Gemination was only occasionally indicated, and as geminated consonants were in the process of reducing to single consonants in Old Irish times, the mutation effect itself was waning. Aspiration was not indicated at all. Aspiration/gemination occurs after: * Within a noun phrase, either of the noun or a preceding article or possessive, all forms that end in a vowel but do not trigger lenition or nasalisation. This includes, at least: ** Genitive singular of all feminines ** Vocative and accusative plural of all genders * Certain prepositions * ''ní'' and ''ba''Palatalisation
Palatalisation as such is phonological, but it also has a grammatical aspect to it. Certain case forms of nouns automatically trigger palatalisation of the final consonant of a word, as do forms of verbs. Consequently, the quality of the final consonant can often vary between different forms of the same word. Palatalisation also occurs when a syllable that originally contained a front vowel undergoes syncope. Palatalisation can sometimes affect the immediately preceding vowel: * ''ía'' → ''é''. * ''áe'', ''óe'' → ''aí'', ''oí''. This is purely an orthographical distinction used in normalised spellings for clarity. It is not adhered to strongly in the manuscripts.Development and restrictions on palatalization
The development of palatalization has been traditionally separated into multiple stages. For these rules, original Proto-Celtic ''a'' and ''ā'' did not count as front vowels. * Palatalization occurred when a single consonant, and also homorganic clusters of aVowel affection
Vowel affection is the changing of the height of a vowel to more closely match the height of the vowel in a following syllable. It is similar to Germanic umlaut, but more pervasive. It was originally a relatively automatic process, but because the final vowels were later mostly lost in the transition to Old Irish, the process became unpredictable and grammaticalised. Three different kinds of vowel affection existed in Old Irish, ''lowering'', ''raising'' and ''u-insertion''. Lowering was caused by a (former) low vowel ''a'' or ''o'' in the following syllable, and affected the underlying short vowels ''i'' and ''u'', changing them to ''e'' and ''o'' respectively. It occurred regardless of the preceding consonants, and was thus rather common. Raising was the reverse development: when followed by a (former) high vowel, short ''i'' or ''u'', in the following syllable, the vowels ''e'' and ''o'' were changed to ''i'' and ''u''. It did not occur in all cases, as it was limited by the intervening consonants. It occurred only when at most one consonant stood between the syllables, and the consonant had to be voiced (this included sonorants). Thus, while the noun ''cenn'' was raised to ''cinn'' in the genitive singular form (along with palatalisation), ''ech'' was not raised and retained its original vowel in its genitive singular form ''eich'' . The underlying vowel of a word remained when the vowel ''e'' formerly followed. For example, in masculine o-stems, the vocative singular form had ''e'' in the ending, but the other forms had other vowels which caused either raising or lowering. In neuter o-stems, ''all'' forms had raising or lowering endings, none originally contained ''e''. This can make it difficult to ascertain what the original underlying vowel was. U-insertion was a third effect, caused by a (formerly) following ''u''. It involved inserting the vowel ''u'' (or ''o'', as an orthographic variant) after an existing vowel, and occurred with the long vowel ''é'' and the short vowels ''a'', ''e'' and ''i''. The results were as follows: * ''a'' → ''au''. * ''e'' → ''iu'' if raising can take place, ''eu''/''eo'' otherwise. * ''i'' → ''iu''. * ''é'' → ''éu''/''éo'', sometimes also ''íu''. U-insertion did not necessarily occur in all cases where it might be expected, in particular when the ''u'' that might cause the effect was still present. For example, the accusative plural of ''ech'' may be ''euchu''/''eochu'', but ''echu'' is also found, lacking u-insertion. For ''fer'', the accusative plural is ''firu'', never ''*fiuru''.Syncope
Syncope of word-medial unstressed short vowels plays an extensive role in derivational morphology in addition to the inflection of Old Irish nouns, verbs, and adjectives. It activates upon attaching a suffix onto a prehistoric stem that would otherwise make the resulting word at least three syllables long. When syncope occurs, it deletes the vowel of every even-numbered syllable except the last. Deleted vowels subject theArticles
Old Irish had a definiteThe definite article
The definite article is used similarly to the English one, marking definite noun phrases. There was also a restriction that prohibited two definite articles in the same noun phrase. When a definite-marked noun is modified by a genitive definite noun phrase, the modified noun loses its article. The definite article can also be used for the introduction of a new character into a narrative, where in English an indefinite article is expected.Declension of the definite article
The definite article is declined for case, gender, and number, and phonological context.Morphophonology of the definite article
The declined forms of the article are also influenced by the initial phoneme of the following word. * The nominative singular masculine article is when in front of a vowel-initial word, and is otherwise. * The genitive singular masculine and neuter, nominative singular feminine, nominative plural masculine, and dative singular all share peculiar morphophonological alternations, marked by ''-n(d)'' in the above table. ** They end in an extra ''d'' when the next word begins in a vowel, aFusion of the article with prepositions
Accusative and especially dative articles undergo mandatory fusion with a preceding preposition, to the point that the dative article seldom ever appears independently. The dative article suffix lacks if the preposition normally lenites a following noun (with the exception of , which does use in article fusion) or is . The dative article suffix contains if it fails to lenite a following noun, or is . may or may not take . Examples of the article fusing with the preposition include: * Dative prepositions: ** "from, of": , plural ** "to, for": , plural ** "from, by": , plural ** "in, at": , plural * Accusative prepositions: ** "beside, with": , plural ** "before": , plural ** "into": , plural ** "through": , pluralNouns
Old Irish has three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter; 3o-stems
The o-stems could be masculine or neuter, and were the most widespread kind of noun, thus this class is well attested. They descend from the Proto-Indo-European thematic inflection. They are characterized by a genitive singular formed by palatalizing the final consonant of the word. Some monosyllables may have their root vowel ''e'' or ''o'' raised to ''i'' or ''u'' respectively when forming the genitive singular. Additionally, their dative singular forms are a constant target for u-infection. The masculine o-stems' nominative plurals were identical to their genitive singulars and had an accusative plural ending in ''-u''. The accusative plural tended to trigger vowel raising, syncope of multisyllabic words, and occasionally u-infection. The declensions of "raven" and "debt" demonstrate the contrast between a hiatus of two vowels and a similar-looking diphthong. also demonstrates ''ía'' and ''é'' alternations, the former appearing in front of unpalatalized consonants and the latter appearing before palatalized consonants. In the neuter variant, the genitive and dative forms were the same as those of the masculine variant, while the nominative, vocative and accusative differed. There were two forms of the nominative-accusative plural, an endingless form and a longer form that ended in ''-a''. The endingless form was common after numerals and the definite article, while the long form tended to occur when the noun is used without an article.io-stems
The io-stems were originally simply o-stems with a before the endings. Later sound changes deleted this consonant, but its presence caused some of the case endings to be preserved where they were deleted in the plain o-stem inflection. The final consonant is either always palatalised, or never.ā-stems
The ā-stems were always feminine, and were the most common type of feminine noun. It was also not uncommon for the dative singular of ā-stem verbal nouns, which ended in palatalized consonants, to displace the unpalatalized nominative singular.iā-stems
The iā-stems were originally a variant of the ā-stems, but were preceded by a which caused changes similar to those in the io-stem inflection. Again, the final consonant could be always palatalised, or never.ī-stems
The ī-stems were always feminine, and were a variant of the iā-stem inflection in which a few case forms lacked an overt ending. In these forms, the final consonant was always palatalised. The forms with an ending could be either palatalised or not, depending on the noun. The ī-stem inflection continues the so-called ''devī''- or ''ī/yā''-inflection of Proto-Indo-European. There were two sub-variants. The original, "long" variant had endings in the accusative and optionally in the dative singular, while the newer "short" variant had no ending and only palatalisation in these forms, by analogy with the ā-stems.i-stems
The i-stems could have any gender. This declension class was characterized by the alternation between a nominative singular ending in a slender consonant and the genitive singular depalatalizing that consonant when attaching the signature genitive ending (''-o'' or ''-a'') without fail. The genitive singular formation for monosyllables would also lower any root vowel ''i'' or ''u'' into ''e'' and ''o'' respectively. The plural forms could either be always palatalised, or never (depending on the noun), while in the singular and dual, the palatalisation depended on the ending. The masculine and feminine variants were identical except for one detail: the nominative singular of feminine i-stems caused lenition, while it did not for masculine i-stems. Several irregular vowel alternations within i-stem nouns existed. Neuter i-stems were relatively rare. Like in the o-stems, only the nominative, vocative and accusative differed from the masculine variety, while the genitive and dative forms were the same.u-stems
The u-stems could be masculine or neuter, and their declensions resembled that of i-stems. Like the i-stems, monosyllables would have their nominative singular root vowel lowered from ''i'' and ''u'' to ''e'' and ''o'' in the genitive singular form. Feminine u-stem nouns had originally existed, but they had all been converted into ā-stems by the time Old Irish was written. The major difference between u-stems and i-stems were that the nominative singular and its homophones always ended in an unpalatalized consonant, when the opposite was true of the i-stems. None of the endings triggered palatalisation by themselves. However, palatalisation did occur when a syllable (formerly) containing a front vowel was contracted; the front vowel itself would then be erased by a u-infection in the inflections that did not involve this syncope. The masculine u-stem nominative plural was often in flux, and attestations varied wildly in its form, with endings in ''-e'', ''-a'', and ''-i'' all being attested. Neuter u-stems were not very common. The genitive singular and dative plural forms were formed similarly to the masculine variety. However, the neuter u-stem genitive plural is unstable; the genitive plural is usually identical to the nominative singular, but occasionally other endings appear (for instance, as genitive plural of "door"). Like the neuter ''o''-stems, they had two forms for the nominative/accusative plural; one identical with the nominative singular but triggering lenition instead of nasalization, and a form ending in ''-a''. The two forms shared similar usage tendencies as their ''o''-stem counterparts.Velar stems
The velar stems, also called "guttural stems", belonged to the larger class of "consonant stems", which mostly shared the same endings. They were masculine or feminine, and had a stem ending in a velar consonant, ''ch'', ''g'' () or ''c'' . The final consonant itself was lost in the nominative and vocative singular. Word-final palatalised ''-ich'' was voiced to ''-ig'', partially merging the two types.Dental stems
The dental stems were also consonant stems, and had a stem ending in a dental consonant, ''th'', ''d'' () or ''t'' (). The final consonant itself was lost in the nominative and vocative singular. Unstressed word-final ''-th'' was generally converted to ''-d'' early on, so that the two types became indistinguishable in most forms. Only a few neuters existed.r-stems
The r-stems were limited to a handful of words for family members. The final ''-r'' was preserved throughout the paradigm, and all but one had ''th'' before the ''r''. Later varieties of Irish attached velar-stem endings to the plural of all members of this class. Only ''bráthair'' "brother" (now no longer being used to refer to actual siblings) survived into Modern Irish with its r-stem declension intact.s-stems
The s-stems were all neuter. The final consonant had disappeared everywhere, leaving the name a bit of a misnomer. The class is called "s-stem" because of its relationship to nouns of this class in other Indo-European languages.n-stems
The n-stems were masculine, feminine or neuter, though the neuters behaved differently from the masculines and feminines. There were several subclasses among the masculine and feminine n-stems: * Lenited final ''n'' ** Final vowel in nominative singular ** No final vowel in nominative singular * Unlenited ''n(n)'' The nouns with lenited final ''n'' included agent nouns ending in ''-am''/''-em'', among other nouns. The nominative singular could be either endingless or end in ''-u'' or ''-e''; those with a vowel had three possible dative singular forms. The nouns with unlenited ''-n(n)'' inflected as follows: The neuters of this class continued the Indo-European proterokinetic neuters in ''*-men-''. Consequently, they almost all ended in ''-m(m)'' in Old Irish. One neuter ''r/n''-heteroclitic noun existed, "grain".Irregular nouns
''Ben'' "woman" preserved a vestige ofIndeclinable nouns
Some nouns were indeclinable. These include: * Three native words meaning "choice": , , and * "weeping" * "Thursday" * Many names of Biblical figures (including "Adjectives
Old Irish adjectives have four degrees of comparison, namely the positive, comparative, equative and superlative forms. In the positive degree,Adjective inflection classes
The adjectives in the positive degree are divided into four basic inflection types: o-ā-stems, io-iā-stems, i-stems, and u-stems. There are also two irregular consonant-stem adjectives, "knowledgeable" and "hot". The ''u''-stem adjectives were the rarest type of adjective. They inflected like ''o/ā''-stem adjectives in the singular (except for their characteristic nominative singular ''u''-infection), and similarly to ''i''-stems in the plural. Attestations of the genitive plural of these adjectives in Early Irish are scant, and those that exist show the adoption of a genitive plural akin to the ''o/ā''-stems.Degrees of comparison
In addition to theEquative degree
The equative degree is used for describing a noun having an adjective's qualities to the same degree as another noun. Equative adjectives are created by suffixing ''-ithir'' or ''-idir'' onto the adjective. Equative adjectives are followed by the accusative case of the noun being compared to. In the following example, "as sharp as" is the equative of "sharp".Comparative degree
The comparative degree asserts that an adjective applies to a noun to a greater degree than to a different noun. It is formed by attaching the suffix to the adjective's root. The other noun being compared to can appear standalone in the dative case. In the following example, is the comparative of "high" and is the dative singular of "heaven".Superlative degree
The superlative degree denotes how the adjective applies to the greatest degree to a certain noun or pronoun than to any other relevant noun. It is formed with a suffix to the adjective's root. It takes on the form if the immediately preceding consonants can be palatalized and if they cannot. Several examples of superlatives are: * "fine, fair" → "finest, fairest" * "well-known" → "best-known" * "beautiful" → "most beautiful"Irregularly formed degrees of comparison
There exist some adjectives that form their degrees of comparison irregularly. Many of them involve suppletion, where the other degrees are formed from a separate root to the positive degree. Others expose fossilized derivational suffixes that were attached to the positive degree in pre-Celtic times that were not also applied to the other degrees. Most of these irregular adjectives have a comparative ending in ''-a'', instead of the usual ''-(i)u'' comparative ending.Intensifying prefixes
Old Irish had primarily four prefixes that could be attached to adjectives to signify that they apply to a particularly high degree. All four prefixes usually caused the lenition of the first consonant of the adjective stem they attach to. The most basic of these is , which becomes before historically present front vowels. itself can also have implications of excess. From are derived two other intensifying prefixes, (from ''*de-ro-'') and (from ''*ess-ro-''). In contrast with , and are used without any excess implied. There also existed another adjective-intensifying prefix, ; this one assimilated a following ''g-'', stopping its lenition.Verbs
Verbs stand initially in the sentence (preceded only by some particles, forming a "verbal complex", and very few adverbs). The verb can be either suffixed for tense, person, mood and aspect (often portmanteau suffixes), or these can be shown by vowel changes in the stem (e.g. present "says", past "said", future "will say"). Before this core "verb phrase" are placed various other preverbal clitic particles, e.g. negative ''ni-/ní-'', perfective ''ro-'' or one or more preverbal particles that add meaning of the verb stem (compare , , , , etc. in Latin verbs). Personal pronouns as direct objects are infixed between the preverb and the verbal stem. A single verb can stand as an entire sentence in Old Irish, in which case emphatic particles such as and are affixed to the end of the verb . Verbs are conjugated in present,Independent and dependent forms
Most verbs have, in addition to the tenses, voices, and moods named above, two sets of forms: an independent and a dependent conjugation. The independent conjugation occurs when the verb occurs absolutely sentence-initial with no preverbs, while the dependent conjugation occurs when the verb is preceded by one or more preverbs. The formation of the independent and dependent conjugations depends on whether a verb is simple or complex. A complex verb is a verb that is always combined with a preverb, while all other verbs are simple verbs. The dependent conjugation of a simple verb is essentially the same as the independent conjugation of a complex verb, though different terminology is used: The absolute and conjunct inflections are distinguished primarily by the endings, e.g. ''biru'' "I carry", ''berid'' "he carries" vs. ''ní-biur'' "I do not carry", ''ní-beir'' "he does not carry" (with negative prefix ''ní-''). The difference between absolute and conjunct endings is thought to reflect an additional particle ''*-es'' added to the absolute verbal form. Final ''-i'' in the conjunct forms was apparently lost early on (cf. a similar change in Latin), though the exact mechanism of the deletion is debated. The difference between deuterotonic and prototonic inflections involves a stress shift. The stress is always placed on the second preverb from the beginning, due to the Celtic version of Wackernagel's law. Consequently, when a preverb is attached to a verb that already has one, the stress shifts one preverb to the left. This stress shift is accompanied by (sometimes radical) changes in the verbal stem and all but the first preverbal particle(s), which merge with the stem, e.g. ''do⋅berat'' "they bring/give", ''as⋅berat'' "they say" vs. ''ní-taibret'' "they do not bring/give", ''ní-epret'' "they do not say". In the ''s''-subjunctive, the allomorphy is even more extreme, especially in the third-person singular: indicative ''as⋅boind'' "he refuses" vs. ''ní⋅opaind'' "he does not refuse", subjunctive ''as⋅bó'' "he may refuse" vs. ''ní⋅op'' "he may not refuse". In many cases, from a synchronic perspective, the changes appear utterly random (''do⋅rósc(a)i'' "he surpasses" vs. ''ní-derscaigi'' "he does not surpass") or even unrecognisable (''imm⋅soí'' "he turns around" vs. ''ní-impaí'' "he does not turn around"). However, the forms usually result from a series of regular sound changes.Primitive Irish *di-s-ro-uss-skokīt vs. *nī-s-di-ro-uss-skokīt, *embi-s-sawet vs. *nī-s-embi-sawet, with the stressed syllable underlined. A few verbs form their prototonic forms irregularly. Three verbs beginning with the prefix ''ro-'', ''ro·cluinethar'' ("to hear"), ''ro·finnadar'' ("to find out"), and ''ro·laimethar'' ("to dare") form their prototonic forms by solely deleting the prefix without any stem change. Two verbs beginning in ''ad-'', ''ad·aig'' ("to drive") and ''ad·ágathar'' ("to dread") do the same. Two other verbs, ''fo·ceird'' ("to put" or "to throw", prototonic ''·cuirethar'') and ''do·bidci'' ("to shoot, hurl", prototonic stem ''díbairg-'') use suppletion to create their prototonic forms. Several verbs beginning with the lexical prefixes ''to-'' (deuterotonic ''do·''), ''fo·'', and sometimes ''ro·'' are permitted to use their prototonic forms even where normally a deuterotonic form would be used. This tends to occur when the next syllable in the deuterotonic form starts with a vowel, e.g. "came" instead of . Non-initial verbs in poetic Bergin's law constructions always take their dependent forms.Classification
Two main classifications of Old Irish verbs exist, both based on the formation of the present indicative: the Thurneysen classification and the McCone classification. Both systems classify verbs broadly between weak and strong, the distinction being that weak verbs have a 3rd person singular conjunct form ending in a vowel, while strong verbs have a 3rd person singular conjunct form ending in a consonant. This distinction, like the strong-weak distinction found in theReduplication
Reduplication in Old Irish verbal conjugation tends to happen in the formation of s-futures, a-futures and reduplicated preterites, especially in strong verbs. * In reduplicated preterites, the first syllable of the reduplicated root consists of the first root-initial consonant followed by /e/. The following syllable would begin with the root-initial consonants (that were not previously deleted) followed by ''a'' and then the root-final consonant. No endings were added in the first and second person singular forms. In the third-person singular, the root-final consonant was always slender, while the plural forms had endings. * In s-futures and a-futures, the first syllable's vowel was instead often /i/, which may be lowered by a-affection to /e/. However, due to various historical phonetic deletions, the reduplication may not be obvious, and in some cases the reduplication of one verb would be analogically extended to other verbs that did not reduplicate similarly. For example, ''sligid'' "strikes down" has a reduplicated preterite ''selaig'' "struck down" and an s-future ''silis'' "will strike down", with a lost reduplicated ''s'' formerly in front of the ''l'' in both paradigms.Augmentation
Old Irish verbs may systematically use certain verbal prefixes to express eitherFormation of augmented forms
The vast majority of verbs use ''ro-'' as their augment. However, there are several major exceptions to using ''ro-''. (augments bolded) * Verbs formed with prefixed ''com-'' (or its allomorph ''con-'') usually use ''ad-'' as their augment. For example, "destroys" forms a perfect "destroyed". * Some irregularly distributed compound verbs use ''com-'' as its augment. For example, "is paid away" has the augmented form "has been paid away". * ''ibid'' ("to drink") uses ''ess-''. Hence its perfect is "he/she/it drank". * ''saidid'' ("to sit") and ''laigid'' ("to lie (down, etc.)") combine ''dí-'' and ''in-'' to form their augments. Hence the perfect of ''saidid'' is "sat". * ''tongaid'' ("to swear") combines ''to-'' and ''com-'' to create its augment. Hence its perfect is "he/she/it swore". * ''mligid'' ("to milk") combines ''to-'' and ''uss-'' to make its augment. Hence the perfect form "I milked". * Some verbs supplete an unrelated verb stem entirely to serve as their augmented forms. ** "to put" and several of its related compounds ending in its suppleted conjunct form use a ''ro''-augmented suppletive stem . ** "to see" suppletes for deuterotonic augmented preterite forms. Otherwise, this verb cannot be augmented. ** uses a suppleted augmented stem . All compounds related to this verb except "to bring, give" augment normally with ''ro-''. ** uses different augmentations depending on the meaning. When used to mean "to bring" it uses for augmentation, but when it means "to give", is used instead. ** "to go" and some of its compounds use a formation that decomposes into ''dí-cum-feth-''. It manifests in forms like the augmented preterite , the augmented subjunctive , and the augmented present . Furthermore, some verbs are prohibited from using augments entirely. These verbs include those derived from the roots and , any verbs already lexically containing the prefix, "to get", and "to find".Imperfect endings
The imperfect, conditional, and past subjunctive have a shared ending set. The imperfect is formed by attaching the imperfect endings onto the present stem, the past subjunctive is formed by attaching these endings to the subjunctive stem, and the conditional is formed by doing likewise to the future stem. The endings have only conjunct forms; if an imperfect, conditional, or past subjunctive simple verb form is to be used in absolute position, the conjunct forms are often used with the dummy particle preceding them. The endings are identical for both non-deponent and deponent verbs.Subjunctive stem types
The subjunctive comes in three variants, all continuing the PIE ''s''-aorist subjunctive. In the ''s''-subjunctive, the ''s'' is attached directly to the root. The endings are partly athematic, especially the 3rd singular, with original suffix ''*-s-t'' that leads to truncation of the root: cf. ''as·boind'' "he refuses" < , prototonic ''·op(a)ind'' < ; subj. ''as·bó'' < , prototonic ''·op'' < ; 2 sg. subj. ''as·bóis'' < , prototonic ''·obbais'' < with thematic ''*-s-es''.The root of this verb is *bod-, originally *bud- < PIE *bhudh- (cognate withFuture stem types
The future comes in four variants. In the below table, ''beirid'' "to carry" and its derivative ''do·beir'' "to bring, give" is once again used to demonstrate an ''a''-future conjugation. For ''s''-future formations, ''cingid'' "to step" and ''fo·loing'' "to support, sustain" are drawn upon.Preterite active stem types
The preterite active comes in four variants: The reduplicated and long vowel preterites share a conjugation pattern (being "suffixless"). No second-person plural absolute forms are attested for any preterite formation, and no non-third-person absolute forms are attested for any t-preterite formations. The preterite conjugations of "to leave, let" for the absolute s-preterite, "to slay" for the absolute t-preterite, "to give, to bring" for the conjunct t-preterite, (preterite ''lod-'') "to go" for the absolute suffixless preterite, and "to reach" for the conjunct suffixless formation are listed in the below table. In addition, the augmented preterite forms of "to give" for the conjunct s-preterite and for an unstressed conjunct t-preterite are also provided.Preterite passive stem types
The preterite passive occurs only in one type, with a ''t''-suffix, originally to the zero-grade root. It originates in the PIE verbal adjective in ''*-tós''. This suffix, however, has diverged into multiple phonetic outcomes due to sound changes. There is no direct connection between the preterite passive stem and the active stem. In the case of roots containingExample
The following is an example of a strong present-tense verb (class B I), showing the absolute, conjunct deuterotonic and conjunct prototonic forms.Prepositions
Dative and accusative prepositions
These unstressed prepositions govern either the accusative or dative and can trigger any of the three major mutations. When they would otherwise govern a pronoun, the prepositions are inflected for person, number, and in the third person singular, gender. Prepositions that take either the dative or accusative cases depending on the semantic meaning also have different inflections for each of the governing cases in the third person. The third-person-singular masculine/neuter form is not formed by a consistent ending, and is formed by various idiosyncratic means. However, the other inflections do follow a consistent ending set.Genitive prepositions
These prepositions invariably govern the genitive. Many of them are formed from a dative or accusative preposition followed by a noun, although there are a few that do not take on such a form. Unlike dative/accusative prepositions, they do not inflect for person, number, or gender for pronominal purposes. Pronominal governance is instead done by fusing a possessive pronoun with the component dative/accusative preposition if it exists, and in front of the preposition if it does not. Hence ''i n-arrad'' "beside" can form a phrase ''inna arrad'' "beside him", with the possessive pronoun ''a'' fused with the component preposition ''iN''. The accusative preposition ''coH'' and the genitive preposition ''dochum'', both meaning "to, towards", may be used to illustrate the contrast between the two classes. "To an end" may be rendered as ''dochum forcinn'', with ''dochum'' causing the genitive form ''forcinn'' to be used. On the other hand, this can also be rendered as ''co forcenn'', with the accusative form ''forcenn'' being used. "Towards him" can likewise be rendered with both the possessive pronominal phrase ''a dochum'' (with the preceding ''a'' being the possessive pronoun meaning "his") and the inflected preposition ''cucci''.Pronouns
Independent personal pronouns
Independent personal pronouns have been reduced to emphatic and topical function, and only occur in the nominative generally following the copula. The copula remains in its third-person singular forms regardless the person and number of the independent pronoun, with the exception of the third-person plural, which forces the copula into its third-person plural forms. However, in the modern Goidelic languages the nominative pronouns have become much more common, even for non-emphatic purposes. There were also independent genitive pronouns, serving both possessive functions (e.g. "mine", "yours", "theirs", "ours") and partitive functions ("of us", "of you", "of them"). However, by modern times the independent genitive pronouns disappeared, being replaced by various idioms.Infixed personal pronouns
By far the most prolific Old Irish personal pronoun formations are their affixed personal pronouns. These serve as direct object pronouns and are always attached onto the preverb preceding the stressed portion of a deuterotonic verbal complex. If a deuterotonic formation does not exist by default (due to the verb being simple in the first place), the preverb ''no'' is used with the conjunct forms of the simple verb to concoct deuterotonic forms. For example, the simple verb ''caraid'', conjunct "loves" can form a deuterotonic base onto which infixed pronouns can be attached. The infixed pronouns belong to three classes, conventionally labelled A, B, and C. The three classes vary by the phonological context of the preverb (classes A and B) or syntactical context of the clause containing it (Class C vs. Classes A and B). They are attached between the first preverb and the next stressed syllable. * Class A pronouns are used after preverbs that historically ended in vowels, such as ''do-'' (preverbal form of ''to-'' and ''dí-''), ''ro-'', ''fo-'', ''no-'', ''imm-'', and ''ar-''. They are also used after the verbal negation particle ''ní''. For ''imm-'' and ''ar-'', a vowel was used to link the preverb and the Class A pronoun. This vowel was overall random but tended to be ''-u-''. * Class B pronouns are used after preverbs historically ending in consonants. They are characterized by starting with /d/, spelled as ''t'' or ''d'' (the forms beginning with ''t'' in the below table can also be sometimes spelled with ''d'') and their irregular fusions with their preverbs. * Class C pronouns are used with verbs within a nasalized subordinate clause. They all contain a voiced dental fricative /ð/, spelled ''d''. This delenited to /d/ when the consonant is preceded by the nasal relative infix ''-n-''. Various irregularities in the phonological manifestations of the pronouns exist. * The Class A pronoun ''-a'' (whether masculine or neuter) suppresses the final vowels of the preverbs it attaches to. On the other hand, it is itself suppressed by the negative particle ''ní'' "does not", leaving only mutational effects behind. For example, "they sang it (i.e. a song, the neuter noun )" contains the infixed pronoun ''-a-'' in between the preverb ''no-'' and the next syllable, with ''-a-'' suppressing the preverb's vowel. But in "they did not sing it", the pronoun vanishes, leaving only lenition as the marker of its presence. * Class B pronouns replace the final consonant of all their preverbs except ''etar-'' and ''for-''. They also irregularly merge ''in-'' with ''ad-'' when attached. * Class C pronouns in the third-person singular masculine and neuter are further subdivided based on either phonological context or the particle preceding the verb. ** ''-d'' appears where the Class A pronoun would otherwise be used. ** ''-id'' appears where the Class B pronoun would otherwise be used. ** ''-did'' when the clause is preceded by ''i'' "into which" or ''co'' "so that". There also existed a set of negative modal pronouns that substitute for the negative imperative particle and the negative relative or interrogative particle whenever a direct object pronoun was called for. These pronouns were built off a stem ''nach-'' or .Possessive pronouns
Possessive pronouns in Old Irish, as expected, have genitive function. Additionally, when modifying verbal nouns, they may encode the direct object of a transitive verbal noun and the subject of an intransitive verbal noun. Unlike genitive modifiers, they are placed before the modified noun. They do not inflect for case and are immune to any word-initial mutation. However, ''mo'' "my" and ''do'' "your (singular)" lose their in front of a word beginning with a vowel. The initial consonant of ''do'' is also devoiced in this situation to and may also be optionally lenited after that to .Fusion of possessive pronouns with prepositions
Like the definite article, possessive pronouns undergo several compulsory contractions with any preceding prepositions. The fusion is more straightforward, but still has several irregularities. * ''mo'' and ''do'' become ''-m'' and ''-t'' when contracted onto a preposition. * ''do'' and ''di'' both contract with any pronoun of the form ''a'' to form . * The second-person plural possessive pronoun never contracts with a preposition. * Nasalizing prepositions have an unlenited ''-(n)n-'' between the preposition and fusing possessive pronoun. * Contraction of ''mo'' after ''for'' is not mandatory. Both the uncontracted ''for mo'' and the contracted ''form'' are attested.Suffixed pronouns
A much less frequent type of pronominal formation is the suffixed pronoun. Suffixed pronouns also denote direct objects, but are instead exclusive to the third-person singular absolute forms of simple verbs. They cause mandatory syncope of the vowel in front of the voiced dental fricative ''d'' that serves as the absolute third-person singular ending, as well as devoicing that consonant termination to ''th''. For example, ''caraid'' "she loves" suffixed with the suffixed pronoun ''-i'' "him" creates ''carthai'' "she loves him", exhibiting the pronouns' signature syncope and devoicing. There also existed a masculine or neuter suffixed pronoun that can be instead attached to absolute simple verbs' first-person singular future forms in ''-(e)a'', first-person plural forms ending in ''-m(a)i'', and third-person plural forms in ''-(a)it''. This suffixed pronoun took on the form ''-it''. Its vowel suppressed the final vowels of the former two endings and syncopated the vowel of the third.Syntax
Old Irish has VSORelative clauses and subordination
Emphasis
Old Irish does not rely on intonation changes to relay emphasis, unlike English. Instead, a set of particles are suffixed onto words to emphasize a given element of the sentence. The particles, also referred to with the Latin name ''notae augentes'' (singular ''nota augens'') can be attached to verbs and nouns alike. The emphatic suffixes vary by person and number, but contain major syncretism in the third person; the emphatic suffixes for the third person masculine and neuter singular in addition to the third-person plural are identical. The emphatic suffixes are: On verbs, they can be used to emphasize the subject or object of a verb when they are encoded within its conjugation or infixed pronoun. Their appearance on verbs is governed by an animacy hierarchy, organized in four tiers. The four tiers, from highest to lowest, are first person, second person, third person human, and third-person inanimate. A ''nota'' of a lower tier cannot appear if the subject or object of the would-be-affixed verb belongs to a higher tier. A vast majority of ''notae'' refer specifically to people. Additionally, for third-person ''notae'', an overtly expressed or relative subject for the verb means that a third-person ''nota'' is not used. Hence: * "She had heard ''me''." (''-sa'' emphasizing who the woman heard — the speaker) would be permitted due to the first-person ''notae'' being unrestricted in the tier system. * "''She'' had heard me." (''-si'' emphasizing who heard the speaker — the woman) would be prohibited due to attempting to refer to a third-person subject in the presence of a first-person object. The emphatic particles can also emphasize conjugated prepositions. * "They had given ''us'' the food." (''-ni'' emphasizes that the food was given to the speaker's group and not to, say, the dogs) They can also emphasize possessive pronouns indirectly by being suffixed after the possessed object, since possessive pronouns go unstressed. * "It's not ''my'' dog." (''-sa'' emphasizes that the speaker in particular isn't the owner, but rather a different person is) Another strategy for emphasis is to front the emphasized element into a copular clause, and convert the remainder of the sentence into a relative clause. Take for example the basic sentence "a man killed my friend". Copular emphasis can create: * (emphasizes who killed the speaker's friend — a man) * (emphasizes who the man killed — the speaker's friend) * (emphasizes what the man did to the speaker's friend — kill them.)Verbal nouns
Genitive and possessive modifiers of verbal nouns exhibit behaviour analogous with that of an ergative–absolutive language. Genitive modifiers indicate the ''object'' of a transitive verbal noun, with the transitive subject instead being indicated by a prepositional phrase (generally based on prepositions ''do'' or ''la''). On the other hand, intransitive verbs do indeed allow genitive modifiers to indicate their subject. * "avenging them" (the possessive pronoun ''a'' indicates the third-person plural object of ''dígal'', the verbal noun of ''do·fich'' "to avenge") * "my avenging of them" (adding a conjugated pronominal phrase ''dom'' to indicate the subject of the verbal noun) * "their prayers" (''a'' in this case indicates the subject of ''guidi'', nominative plural of the verbal noun of ''guidid'' "to pray") Preceding the verbal noun by ''oc'' "at" and the appropriate conjugation of the verb ''at·tá'' "to be" indicatesInterrogation
Interrogative constructions in Old Irish are divided into two types:Yes–no questions
A''Wh''-questions
Coordination
Two verbal subjectsNotes
References
{{language grammars Celtic grammars