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Irish: Lesson Fourteen

Because the plural of “bád”, which is “báid”, has the slender vowel “i” at the end, it aspirates the adjective that comes after it, whereas the feminine plural leaves the adjective unaffected — almost the opposite to what happens in the singular.

Genitive Singular of Adjectives

The behaviour of adjectives when they follow nouns in the genitive is as haphazard as that of the nouns themselves, but luckily the Christian Bros. managed to isolate the nine different kinds of adjective and describe their genitive forms depending on whether they’re following a masculine or feminine noun. Note that feminine adjectives are never aspirated in the genitive singular or in the plural, but masculine ones are:

Adjective

The usual disclaimer applies: there’s little point in memorizing these forms or worrying about them; as long as you can generally recognize them when they appear in an Irish text you’ll get used to them over time.

Genitive Plural of Adjectives

How an adjective is declined in the plural depends on the noun it’s qualifying. In Lesson 13 we learned the difference between a strong-plural noun and a weak-plural noun. Weak nouns have the same genitive plural and nominative singular, but strong nouns have the same genitive plural and nominative plural. If an adjective follows a strong-plural noun, it has the same form for all cases of the plural, e.g.

na cailíní óga

the young girls

na gcailíní óga

of the young girls

But if an adjective follows a weak-plural noun, it has the same form in the genitive plural as it does in the nominative singular:

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