Redwolf wrote:
This page is a prepositional pronoun reference for learners (or for people like me, who tend to forget how to conjugate prepositions I don't use frequently!) Apparently you can quiz yourself on them as well:
http://www.irishpage.com/quiz/preppron.htmRedwolf
GRMA Redwolf. I think that the matter of prepositions and prepositional pronouns do not receive adequate coverage in the grammar textbooks. The use of a preposition or prepositional pronoun can completely change the meaning of a verb or phrase. The use of ''de'' and ''do' are ised interchangeably by different authors within the same Gaeltacht region. It may be dialectical but it is not consistent.
In today's Nuacht RTE was the following sentence:
Líomhnaigh iar bhall don IRA, Paudie McGahon, gur éignigh ball sínsireach don IRA é nuair a bhí sé 17 d'aois ina thigh i gContae Lú sna 90aidí.
I would have expected ''ball den IRA'' agus ''ball sinsearach den IRA''
Séamus