Gender
From Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki
Revision as of 18:08, 13 May 2012 by AndrewCarnie (talk | contribs)
for a definition of Gender see Gender (definition)
There are two genders in Scottish Gaelic: Masculine and Feminine.
The gender of a noun affects a number of grammatical properties.
- The form of the article: an clach 'the stone' (m) vs a' chaora 'the sheep' (f)
- The form of adjectives: an clach mòr 'the book stone' vs a' chaora mhòr 'the big sheep'
- The pronoun used to refer to the noun (there is no pronoun equivalent to "it" in Scottish Gaelic.) Masculine nouns are referred to with e; feminine nouns are referred to with i.