Difference between revisions of "Articles"

From Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 3: Line 3:
 
Throughout the following symbols indicate initial mutations and are not traditionally written out
 
Throughout the following symbols indicate initial mutations and are not traditionally written out
 
<sup>L</sup> means "triggers [[lenition]]",  
 
<sup>L</sup> means "triggers [[lenition]]",  
Articles ending in ''-n'' or ''-m'' often trigger [[Voice (definition)|voicing]] of the following consonant through [[Nasalization (definition)|nasalization]], although this is not indicated in writing.
+
Articles ending in ''-n'' or ''-m'' often trigger [[Voice (definition)|voicing]] of the following consonant through [[Eclipsis]], although this is not indicated in writing.
 
   
 
   
 
The system is complex, so we give three different descriptions. Choose the one that suits you best.
 
The system is complex, so we give three different descriptions. Choose the one that suits you best.

Revision as of 09:32, 13 May 2009

Article is a common name for what linguists typically call determiners. In English the and a/an are articles. In Gaelic the indefinite article is silent (e.g. leabhar 'a book') -- the exception being the indefinite genitive, where there is no overt article, but the noun is lenited (Lamb 2003: 29). The definite article surfaces variously as an, am, a', nam, nan or na depending upon the case, gender, and number of the noun it modifies and depending upon which consonant the following word begins with.

Throughout the following symbols indicate initial mutations and are not traditionally written out L means "triggers lenition", Articles ending in -n or -m often trigger voicing of the following consonant through Eclipsis, although this is not indicated in writing.

The system is complex, so we give three different descriptions. Choose the one that suits you best.

Description 1: By gender and number

Masculine Singular Article

before
f b, m, p c, g sV, sl, sn, sr d, t, l, n, r, sg, sm, sp, st before vowels
Nom/Acc (common case) am an an t-
Dat anL a'L an t- an
Gen


Feminine Singular Article

before
f b, m, p c, g sV, sl, sn, sr d, t, l, n, r, sg, sm, sp, st before vowels
Nom/Acc (common case) anL a'L an t- an
Dat
Gen na na h-


Plural Article

before
f, b, m, p all other consonants before vowels
Nom/Acc (common case) na na h-
Dat
Gen nam nan


Description 2: By form of the article

Form location
a'L Feminine Nom/Acc Singular before "b, c, g, m, p"
Feminine Dative Singular before "b, c, g, m, p"
Masculine Dative Singular before "b, c, g, m, p"
Masculine Genitive Singular before "b, c, g, m, p"
am Masculine Nom/Acc Singular before "f, b, m, p"
an Feminine Nom/Acc Singular before vowels and d, n, t, l, r, sg, sp, st, sm
Feminine Dative Singular before vowels and d, n, t, l, r, sg, sp, st, sm
Masculine Dative Singular before vowels and d, n, t, l, r, sg, sp, st, sm
Masculine Genitive Singular before vowels and d, n, t, l, r, sg, sp, st, sm
Masculine Nom/Acc Singular before anything except vowels and "b, f, m, p"
anL Feminine Nom/Acc Singular before f
Feminine Dative Singular before f
Masculine Dative Singular before f
Masculine Genitive Singular before f
an t- Feminine Nom/Acc Singular before sV, sl, sn, sr
Feminine Dative Singular before sV, sl, sn, sr
Masculine Dative Singular before sV, sl, sn, sr
Masculine Genitive Singular before sV, sl, sn, sr
Masculine Nom/Acc Singular before vowels
na Nom/Acc plural before consonants
Dative plural before consonants
Feminine Genitive singular before consonants
na h- Nom/Acc plural before vowels
Dative plural before vowels
Feminine Genitive singular before vowels
nam Plural Genitive before b, f, m, p
nan Plural Genitive before other sounds


Description 3: An Abstract Analysis

The following description is based on the insightful description found at [[1]]. The symbols in the next chart are abstract! You need to translate them using the guides that follow.

singular plural
Masculine Feminine
Nom/acc (common) W X Y
Dative X
Genitive X Y Z

Each of these abstract forms is realized the following ways, predictable from the phonology:


W

Form Context
an t- before vowel
am before b, f, m, p
an elsewhere


X

Form Context
a'L before b, c, g, m, p
anL before "f"
an t- before sV, sl, sn, sr
an elsewhere


Y

Form Context
na before consonants
na h- before vowels


Z

Form Context
nam before b, f, m, p
nan elsewhere


External Links


References

Lamb, William (2003) Scottish Gaelic. Lincom-Europa.