Lughaidh wrote:
Quote:
But, how do you know which verb to answer yes to, or does it matter? For example, what if someone asked "Do you want to go back home?" Would you answer, "I do" or "I want" ? Or does it matter, since both answer the question?
In Irish you have only one verb normally

The Irish language is much easier than English in that point, you don't need "to do" to ask questions:
An bhfuil tú ag iarraidh a ghabháil 'na' bhaile?
- Tá / Níl
Just to specify a bit: in English, when you say ‘do you want to go?’, for example, ‘want’ and ‘go’ are both in the infinitive—the infinitive ‘want’ is governed by ‘do’, and the infinitive ‘go’ is governed by ‘want’. Of course, in English, the infinitive nearly always sounds like the present, so that can be hard to know instinctively. But if you consider the Hiberno-English present habitual, ‘I do be wanting’ (for example), you’ll see that ‘be’ is clearly an infinitive.
If you change the question to something habitual, like “Do you be taking the bus often?”, it’s easier to see that you have to answer ‘I do’—not ‘I be’, which is ungrammatical (it would have to be ‘I am’).
In other words, you have to repeat the
finite verb.
Since Irish inflects her verbs more than English, it’s usually easier to tell which is the finite verb. Of course, it’s also quite regular that the (finite) verb comes first in the sentence in Irish.
So in Lughaidh’s Irish example, where you actually also have three verbs, it goes like so (transferred to more Connemara-ish Irish, since I seem to recall you’re using
Learning Irish?):
An bhfuil tú - ag iarraidh - goil - abhaile?Blue = finite verb
Red = nonfinite verbal forms (here verbal noun)
As in English, the finite verb is repeated.