Cúmhaí wrote:
Some new simple questions have arisen as I continue with Rosetta Stone.
Cén fáth nach bhfuilimid in ann dul chuig an trá amárach?
Tá sé scamallach inniu. Tá sé chun a bheith ag cur báistí amárach!
So my first question is what is with this "can" structure "in ann"? Are these homonyms or is it "in in it" like 'i + i + é'? How did that gain the meaning "can"?
Second, this "chun" / "chun a" isn't the future tense, right? I imagine it's like "going to", right? I think we had some future when we learned about time with "Fágfaidh mo thraein ag trí nóiméad is fiche chun a naoi r.n." and the like
I don't know the grammatical explanation.
But in Conamara when we say "ann" meaning "there" it sounds like ÁNN.
But "in ann" doesn't have the fada sound.
In Conamara we also say - fiche nóiméad
gon naoi.
I can never explain these, or their etymology, as that is not how I speak it myself.