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-adh - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Old Irish -ad, from the thematic vowel of the various verb stems + Proto-Celtic *-tus.

-adh m (genitive singular -ta)

  1. Creates the regular verbal noun of first-conjugation verbs.
  • May be used as a noun, which then decline as third-declension masculine nouns (which may or may not have a plural):
    mol (praise, verb) + ‎-adh → ‎moladh m (praise, noun)

From Old Irish -ad, from the thematic vowel of the various verb stems + Proto-Celtic *-to.

-adh

  1. Autonomous ending of first-conjugation verbs in the past indicative tense.
  • -aíodh (second-conjugation broad form)
  • -íodh (second-conjugation slender form)

From Old Irish -ad, from the thematic vowel of the various verb stems + Proto-Celtic *-to.

-adh

  1. Analytic ending of first-conjugation verbs in the past habitual tense
  2. Analytic ending of first-conjugation verbs in the past subjunctive mood
  3. Third-person singular ending of first-conjugation verbs in the imperative mood
  • -ódh (second-conjugation broad form)
  • -eodh (second-conjugation slender form)
  1. ^ Quiggin, E. C. (1906) A Dialect of Donegal, Cambridge University Press, § 391, page 130

From Old Irish -ad, from the thematic vowel of the various verb stems + Proto-Celtic *-tus.

-adh

  1. Regular verbal noun ending.
  • May be used as a noun, which then decline as third-declension masculine nouns (which may or may not have a plural):
    mol (praise, verb) + ‎-adh → ‎moladh m (praise, noun)

From Old Irish -ad, from the thematic vowel of the various verb stems + Proto-Celtic *-to.

-adh

  1. Autonomous ending of verbs in the past indicative tense
  2. Analytic ending of verbs in the conditional tense
  3. Third-person singular ending of verbs in the imperative mood