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Alba Nuadh

B1
Dashboard
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Complete for 2 points

Bilingual transcription: Eadar

Bilingual transcription: Between

Watch this clip where Joy gives us some of her useful tips and favourite phrases. This time it’s roimhearan  (prepositions): EADAR.

Most verbs in Gaelic form their past tense simply by leniting their root.

Cuir, ‘put or send’, for example, is Chuir in the past tense: Chuir mi sìos e, ‘I put it down’.

And the dependent form is simply do chuir, as in the question An do chuir thu air falbh e? Did you send it away?

But a small number of irregular verbs have unusual past tense forms, very different from their root. The past tense of FAIC, ‘to see’, is chunnaic, with its dependent form faca as in the question Am faca tu?

The past tense of rach, to go, is chaidh, and its dependent form deach, Càit an deach thu?

dèanin the past tense is rinn. Dè rinn sinn an-dè? Cha do rinn sinn mòran.

And don’t confuse the past tense of thoir (give or bring), which is thug, and fhuair, the past tense of faigh (to get or find). Fhuair sinn seòmar spaideil, ‘We got a smart room’. But Thug iad dhomh seòmar spaideil ‘They gave me a nice room’.