Jay Bee wrote:
Either, today. Donegal is mostly lenition and the West and Munster, eclipses.
There was once a difference for location and direction, so it would be 'ar an bhealach' (on the road) and 'chug an mbealach' (towards the road), in the logic (the words theme selves would also have changed if possible, but that's a separate story)
ar an bhealach (proper dative)
ar an mbealach (accusitive)
The accusative case was traditionally used to express movement and is marked by an urú.
The dative case was always marked with a séimhiú.
It still exists today in the fossilised phrases isteach and istigh, and amach and amuigh.
i.e. Táim ar mo shlí/ ag dul isteach
Táim ag dul i
steach (accusitive = movement)
i = preposition -i- = in
teach = house
s = historical -s-, found in lei
s an, in
s an etc...
but,
Táim is
tigh (dative)
Tigh being the dative form of te(a)ch, and exists in the Nominative in Munster
tigh, Scottish and Ulster Gaelic
toigh/ taigh and Manx
thie.
When the accusative collapsed**, or the idea of movement collapsed and the categorisation of the prepositions became less rigid, the dative case became the norm following a prepsition + the article. But in Munster and Connacht, the accsitive's initial mutation i.e. an t-urú was adopted over the traditional dative séimhiú.
There is evidence to suggest that fragments of the accusative remained in existence with Irish speakers of the 40s and 50s.
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(Amhlaoibh Ó Súilleabháin)
Please wait for corrections/ more input from other forum members before acting on advice
I'm familiar with Munster Irish/ Gaolainn na Mumhan (GM) and the Official Standard/an Caighdeán Oifigiúil (CO)