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Slàinte is Sunnd

B1
Dashboard
sg-star
Complete for 2 points

Bilingual transcription: Riochdairean roimhearach

Bilingual transcription: Prepositional pronouns

Watch this clip where Joy gives us some of her useful tips and favourite phrases. 

A relative clause is a clause that follows a noun to tell us more about it, like: ‘the film that you saw’, ‘the house that you bought’.

In English we can often miss out ‘that’ and just say ‘the film you saw’, ‘the house you bought’.

But in Gaelic we need the relative particle a: am film a chunnaic thu, an taigh a cheannaich thu.

And in the future tense, after a, we usually have to use the -as form of the verb: gach fuaim a chluinneas tu, ‘every noise that you hear’.

Sometimes, though, the relative clause has a preposition, and in that case we need to use the dependent form of the verb, similar to the question.

So not Tha, but A bheil, not Bha, but An robh.

For example: An duine ris an robh thu a’ bruidhinn, ‘the person to whom you were speaking’, An duine ris an robh thu a’ bruidhinn.

Or: an teaghlach aig a bheil trì coin, the family that has three dogs.

Or using another verb, the verb ‘to go’: am baile dhan deach thu ‘the town you went to’.

Chaidh thu, you went, but am baile dhan deach thu.