Áine Óir wrote:
I'm not too sure about the construction
'The (noun) I (verb - past tense)'
Is it the infinitive you use?
No. Never the infinitive, which doesn’t exist in Irish and is expressed via the verbal noun (
an cúrsa a dhéanamh mé?!?!?).
Quote:
mar shampla: 'An cúrsa a rinne mé' / 'An cúrsa a dhearna mé'
Am I just getting confused because 'déan' is irregular? Because I would usually have no doubt about
'An leabhar a léigh mé'.
In that case, yes. You’re just getting confused because
déan is irregular.
The relative pronoun (or particle)
a ‘that/which/who(m)’ has two forms in Irish:
1. The direct relative. Always
a. Lenites and is followed by the absolute form of the verb. Is used when
a stands for the subject or the object in the relative clause.
This is the case here: an cúrsa a rinne mé = a stands for an cúrsa, and the relative clause, if turned into a full sentence, would read rinne mé an cúrsa, with an cúrsa (= a) being the object in the sentence.2. The indirect relative.
A with present and future tense forms (and past and conditional forms of some irregular verbs),
ar with past and conditional forms.
A eclipses and
ar lenites. Both are used with the dependent form of the verb. Used when the relative stands for anything other than the subject or object in the relative clause, or when it stands for something that is then repeated later on in the relative clause.
This would be the case if the sentence had been (sin é) an duine a ndearna mé cúrsa leis ‘the person I did the course with’. If you turn the relative part of that into a full sentence, you get rinne mé an cúrsa leis an duine (sin); in other words, a = an duine (sin), which is the object of the preposition le—meaning it’s part of an adverbial phrase, not subject or object. When made into a relative clause, le includes its object (it’s still leis), so what the relative particle stands for is actually repeated later on in the relative clause. Therefore, we need to use the indirect relative particle.Remember that the indirect particle
a is also sometimes (but not always) used with irregular verbs in the past and conditional, if the verb has separate absolute and dependent forms. So:
An cúrsa a rinne mé / an cúrsa a lean mé (direct),
butAn cúrsa ar fhreastal mé air / an cúrsa a ndearna mé é (indirect, since what
a(r) stands for is repeated later in the relative clause, underlined)
In the latter, it’s
ar before
freastal ’cause that’s a regular verb; but
a before
(n)dearna, since that’s an irregular verb that has separate absolute (
rinne) and dependent (
dearna) forms.
Hope this makes it clearer (rather than muddier).
