Difference between revisions of "Negation"
From Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki
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|NEG | |NEG | ||
|sense | |sense | ||
| + | |- | ||
|colspan=7|'a man without sense' | |colspan=7|'a man without sense' | ||
|} | |} | ||
==Double Negatives== | ==Double Negatives== | ||
Revision as of 19:50, 6 November 2012
Negation in Scottish Gaelic can occur at the clausal level, the constituent level, or at the word level.
Sentential Negation
At the sentence level, a negative particle precedes the entire clause:
CHAN signifies a negative, declarative clause.
| Chan | eil | iad | gu math | |||
| NEG | are | they | well | |||
| 'They are not well.' | ||||||
NACH signifies a negative, interrogative clause.
| Nach | eil | iad | gu math | |||
| NEG | are | they | well | |||
| 'Are they not well?' | ||||||
Constituent Negation
The prepositions gun and as aonais are used to negate certain constituents:
| duine | gun | chiall | ||||
| a man | NEG | sense | ||||
| 'a man without sense' | ||||||