Demonstratives or An cat ud thall

O Goireasan Akerbeltz
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Soo ... now we've done the more difficult adverbs, we can move on to the demonstratives. Again, Gaelic has the three way split to indicate that which is close to the speaker (proximal), close to the addressee (medial), and a long way from either (distal). Again, Doraemon is here to illustrate:

seo-sin.jpg

You simply add seo [ʃɔ], sin [ʃin], and ud [əd] to whichever noun you wish. They can't appear on their own, so linguists call them enclitics because they must latch on to a host noun. Note that the distinction between immediate and fuzzy locations, (cf. an-sin vs. thall) largely does not enter this arena. However, the one thing you can do is to add thall to ud to give the meaning of "that thing over there", for example, a' phoit ud thall. You can't do that with sin, neither can you add a-bhos to seo.

seo-sin-siud.jpg

So where does siud come into it you might ask? Good question. It comes into play when you build sentences which are seemingly missing a verb, such as seo mo mhàthair, which gets translated into English as 'this is my mother'.

As you all know, in Gaelic, that's the easiest way of building a declarative sentence about existence, without getting into hot water about choice of verbs etc. I suspect the s- in siud [ʃid] is simply an analogy to seo and sin (i.e. trying to make ud fit in with seo and sin) - but it might just be the verb is itself. I'll try to find out, so watch this space. But, at any rate, that's how you use siud: in a declarative sentence about existence 'that's a pot', 'this is a cat', 'this is a boy' etc. Incidentally, this also works with definite nouns e.g. seo an cat 'this is the cat'. Just in case you were wondering.

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