CaoimhínSF wrote:
That is basically a Gaelic pattern (their ancestors are largely of Ulster-Scots or "Scots-Irish" origin), and the origin of the form is more obvious when you know that in Scottish Gaelic, the word aig (= Irish ag) is generally shortened to just a' [a + apostrophe] in such expressions, unless it comes before a vowel. So, the Irish ag dul ("[at] going") is a' dol in Scottish Gaelic.
At least with
ag the dropping of /g/ exists in colloquial Irish speech as well. It doesn't exist in the Caighdean (though it should!), however.
CaomhínSF] The "a-____ing" form is also present in some other dialects (of English) in England, and there's a theory that it also has its origins there in the pre-Anglo Saxon (Brythonic) dialects of their ancestors.[/quote]
Some dialects here in America too. Though it's often considered backwards and uneducated.
[quote="Dáithí Mac Giolla. wrote:
For preforming a task would you not ask something like "cad atá á dheanamh agat?"
Yeah, but that's more like "What are you doing?" with an emphasis on the action (and could be translated as passive). You could also say
Céard (a)tá tú a dhéanamh which is active without any emphasis.