Qwbmwdqwg: Difference between revisions

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#* Example: ''creic{{cda}}e'' 'booty, prey' (gen. sg. of ''creach'')  
#* Example: ''creic{{cda}}e'' 'booty, prey' (gen. sg. of ''creach'')  
# Most ''-t'' and ''-t{{cll}}'' nouns become feminine and are borrowed in their nominative singular forms, sometimes with lenition.
# Most ''-t'' and ''-t{{cll}}'' nouns become feminine and are borrowed in their nominative singular forms, sometimes with lenition.
#* Example: ''s{{cll}}mac{{cda}}t{{cll}}'' 'control, authority' (Note: this usual sense of this word is a bit of a Hebraism; it originally meant 'rule'.)
#* Example: ''s{{cll}}mac{{cda}}t{{cll}}'' 'control, authority' (Note: this usual sense of this word is from influence from writers who knew Hebrew; it originally meant 'rule'.)
# Most other inanimate Irish nouns become masculine and are borrowed in their nominative singular forms.
# Most other inanimate Irish nouns become masculine and are borrowed in their nominative singular forms.
#* Example: ''gnè'' 'property, feature'
#* Example: ''gnè'' 'property, feature'
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