The Merry Ploughboy wrote:
E.g...
"Tá an cailín i bhfad ón teach."
Tá just seems to me to be a verb like "is." I'm not a linguist, so I'm not sure of the terminology, but it has seemed to me to indicate a state or an action.
An seems to mean what one of those articles describes as the definite article "the."
cailín = girl
Correct so far.
The Merry Ploughboy wrote:
i = her or she, depending
"i" means "in", "í" means "her" (the fada/accent mark makes a difference)
The Merry Ploughboy wrote:
bhfad = far
"fad" means length. "i bhfad" literally means "in length" or more loosely translated it means "far away." Note that eclipses comes into play here, "fad" becomes "i bhfad" (the word i adds the bh).
The Merry Ploughboy wrote:
ón I am not sure about, and why I ask the question above. Is it prepositional?
"ón" means "from the" (ó + an), a combination of the preposition ó (from) and the definite article an (the).
The Merry Ploughboy wrote:
teach = house
correct
The Merry Ploughboy wrote:
So I read it linearally (not sure thats a word). I know you cant really do this but it has always been helpful to me to read it as its written instead of trying to read it like I read in english...
"Tá an cailín i bhfad ón teach" = Is the girl her far from (?) house = The girl is far from her house.
Tá an cailín i bhfad ón teach = Is the girl in length from+the house = The girl is far from the house