Lughaidh wrote:
Breandán wrote:
Lughaidh asked if this was really done. The answer to that I think is yes.
I was surprised because it's not what I learnt. And I don't think you would do that in Ulster.
Normally you use the verb alone, with no pronoun, but when the verb contains the pronoun (-aim, etc), then you use that personal ending
eg.
- An ólann tú tae?
- Óla(i)m. (not ólann).
But:
- An ólfaidh tú tae?
- Ólfaidh.
Ó Siadhail has examples using the synthetic forms (i.e., pronoun endings) when "echoing" the verb and when answering questions in the future and in the past:
Glanfaidh tú an bord, an nglanfais? "You'll clean the table, won't you?"
-
Nach ndéanfaidh tú é? "Won't you do it?"
-
Ní dhéanfad. "No."
-
Ar nigh tú na soithí? "Did you wash the dishes?"
-
Níos. Nígh mé ar ball iad. "Yes. I washed them a while ago."
These answers are a little more emphatic than just answering
Ní dhéanfaidh or
Nigh.
It is one of the few situations where Connacht speakers still use the synthetic forms in speech.