galaxyrocker wrote:
"sea" can only mean "yes' in certain situations, though you will see learner's using it as a generic yes. But, really, to say yes, you repeat the verb (and "sea" is just that with some forms of the copula -> "Is ea")
"Ar rith tú?" (Did you run?)
"Rith" (I ran)
"Níor rith" (I didn't run)
Yep...that's it exactly.
You will hear people using "'sea" as kind of a generic "uh huh" or "yeah, yeah, right, I get it," but it can only be used as "yes" in answer to a question when the copula is involved (and even then only in particular circumstances):
An múinteoir thú? 'Sea.
An tusa an múinteoir? Is mé.
With questions based on "Ar mhaith," you would say "Ba mhaith" for "yes" or "Níor mhaith" for "no."
Of course, you can always take a route that doesn't involve saying "yes" or "no"...for example "cinnte" ("certainly"). People often do. The reason I specifically asked for "yes" or "no" in this thread, however, is that I wanted people to practice spotting and re-stating the verb. It's an important concept in Irish that many beginners find daunting (I'm also guessing it's what the teacher of the OP in the other thread was expecting).
It's a good idea, when you learn a verb, to learn the interrogative form in conjunction with the correct "yes/no" response. That way it starts to become automatic.
Redwolf