Verse:Mwtqwlqwj/Qwbmwdqwg: Difference between revisions

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Irish nouns ending in a stressed long vowel: ''gnèje, gnèc, gnèh, gnèhe, gnène, gnècwm, gnèhwm''
Irish nouns ending in a stressed long vowel: ''gnèje, gnèc, gnèh, gnèhe, gnène, gnècwm, gnèhwm''
==== Pluralization ====
==== Pluralization ====
For learned and semi-learned Irish borrowings:
For learned and semi-learned Irish borrowings (for inanimates):
* First- and fifth-declension nouns basically use their Irish plurals
* First- and fifth-declension nouns essentially use their Irish plurals
* Nouns ending in ''-a'' or ''-e'' take a plural in ''-(a)iḋèṫ'', ''-èṫ'', or ''-àṫ''
* Nouns ending in ''-a'' or ''-e'' take a plural in ''-(a)iḋèṫ'', ''-èṫ'', or ''-àṫ''
* Other nouns that have an ''-(a)iḋe'' (modern ''-(a)í'') plural in Irish pluralize in ''-(a)iḋèṫ''
* Other nouns that have an ''-(a)iḋe'' (modern ''-(a)í'') plural in Irish pluralize in ''-(a)iḋèṫ''; in particular ''-t'' or ''-t{{cll}}'' nouns pluralize in ''-(a)iḋèṫ''
* ''-t'' or ''-t{{cll}}'' nouns pluralize in ''-(a)iḋèṫ''
* Other nouns use an Irish strong plural: ''-a'', ''-ta'', ''-ṫa/-ṫe'', or ''-aḋ/-eḋ''.
* Nativized Irish loans often use broken plurals
* agentives in ''-(a)iḋ''are borrowed as nisba ''-(a)ì''
Nativized Irish loans often use broken plurals.


==== Construct state ====
==== Construct state ====