djwebb2021 wrote:
But there are phrases like is é an áit, is é mo thuairim and others where a feminine noun is referred to by é - apparently not focusing too much on the gender of noun.
Those are a bit different.
is é mo thuairim go… uses
é because the pronoun here refers
not to the noun but to the
go-subordinate phrase that follows, the copular structure is literally “my opinion (subject) is it (subpredicate): that XYZ (predicate)”. The
é is subpredicate referring to
go…, and clauses of this kind are always referred to with the default pronoun
é, never
í.
I’d expect
í in cases like
is í mo thuairim-se an tuairim gur aontaigh gach éinne léi (though even in such cases, I guess,
is é mo thuairim would be common under influence of the type above).
I deal with this type
here in my Guide to Irish “to be”.
is é an áit is different yet because
áit is commonly referred to with masculine pronouns in general.
EDIT: and coincidentally, you’ll often get
cad é before feminine stuff because
cad é etymologically comes from
caide, caidhe (< Old Irish
cote) which was independent of gender of the following stuff, but was in early modern language reanalyzed as
cad + pronoun and a new form
cad í appeared, but the older
cad é / caidé, goidé surviving in all contexts too.