Labhrás wrote:
Vitaee wrote:
Thanks for the reply. Your last suggestions sounds best for what I'm looking for.
But I have a question about your other suggestion.
An Cionnfhaolach wrote:
Go mbeannaí Dia an teaghlach seo 'May God bless this family'.
I believe that "mbeannaí" is derived from "beannaigh", but I can't figure out the grammatical
usage there. Obviously, eclipsis(?) is going on because of the "Go", and I'm not quite sure what "Go"
is doing here either.

Yes, eclipsis.
Beannaí is present tense, subjunctive mood of beannaigh
Wishes are traditionally phrased go + subjunctive in Irish
Go mbeannaí Dia = "that bless God" = May God bless
Crossed with LabhrásJust to add,
Although, the present subjunctive is underused (it should follow phrases where there's a sense of 'until' involved), it remains petrified in greetings and other phrases:
e.g.
Dia (is Muire) Duit is actually a contraction of
go mbeannaí Dia (is Muire) dhuitSlán is also a contraction of
Go dté tú/dtéir slán Go mairir/ go maire tú an céád 'may you live to be a hundred'.
Go raibh maith agat is also in the present subjunctive.
The
raibh isn't related to the past tense, but is made up of the
ro- of
possibility +
bí ; it is formed from the conjunct form of the 3rd sing. present sub. in old Irish, i.e.
ní/ nícon roib.
The
raibh of the past tense contains the
ro- of the
perfect past; the perfect past collapsed with with the simple past (preterite) c. 800/850 AD.
Simple past (3rd sing.):Boí ... Ní boí/ Nícon bhoíPerfect Past 3rd singularRo boí ... Ní/ Nícon robae (rabae) > ní robha/ rabha > ní robh/ raibh
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(Amhlaoibh Ó Súilleabháin)
Please wait for corrections/ more input from other forum members before acting on advice
I'm familiar with Munster Irish/ Gaolainn na Mumhan (GM) and the Official Standard/an Caighdeán Oifigiúil (CO)