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Conjugated Prepositions Made Easier Tricky one. They are very old words/forms and it's been a long time since they they were first formed, involving things like the Old Irish accusative which have been dead for a long time now, so there is no foolproof way of giving you a simple guide which tells you how you can just form them on the spot. There's a few pointers that we can give you though. Broadly speaking you can group modern Gaelic preposition into 5 categories - Regular, Mostly Regular, 3rd Person S, Labial in Root and Decidedly Weird. We have grouped them this way because this then allows you to learn them in groups and perhaps memorise some of rules. We'll also explain their history further down which may also help some of you to understand these pesky little buggers.
A few things about the above paradigm: ROOT isn't meant in the histroical way ie ag- is not the historical derivation of aig, but for the purposes of analysing the modern conjugated prepositions, ag- can be taken as the from from which they are derived. The superscript i means that it's inserted to conform with the caol ri caol rule. Hardening means that if the last consonant in the root is g, you harden this to c.
The most striking feature of this group is that it uses the root form for the 3rd person singular masculine. The other bit to watch out for with air is that in the plural the root slenderises. And we get innte because the root used to be int-. But more of the history later. The prepositions in brackets are other/older spellings of these still kicking about which fit the paradigm much better and which GOC abolished so non-chalantly. <sigh> The next group is also fairly regular, but different because the 3rd person singular masculine adds an -s to the root:
As you can see, this bunch is mostly regular except for ás, which has [s] instead of the expected [ʃ] and the 3rd person singular feminine leatha which is a bit weird. The Irish form léithe fits the paradigm perfectly though, not that that is any consolation to us. Again, i gets inserted so the caol ri caol rule isn't broken. Almost there. There next group we decided to call Labial in Root because they - surprise - all contain a labial (b, m, f):
Nothing much to add about this group really. As you will see later on, that weird -p- isn't part of the ending but rather a very old part of the root that crops up now and then, but let's finish this off first and take a look at the Decidedly Weird Group (luckily there's only one preposition, unfortunately it's also perhaps the most common one...):
As you can see, compared to the other ones do is really weird. The historical notes aside, there isn't much else unfortunately that we can add that might help you. Except a general note perhaps: for adults, learning a new language invariable involves learning stuff by heart. If you were doing Basque you'd have to cope with over 12.000 forms for the two verbs 'to be' and 'to have' alone ... so learning the few irregular verbs of Gaelic and these few prepositions isn't that bad really. It's really worthwile putting in the effort though ... they are REALLY common and having to think before coming out with your conjugated preposition really marks you as a learner!! On to the history then for the curious minds ... |