When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Scottish Gaelic grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Gaelic_grammar

    Gaelic uses possessive determiners (corresponding to my, your, their, etc.) differently from English. In Gaelic, possessive determiners are used mostly to indicate inalienable possession, for example for body parts or family members. As indicated in the following table, some possessive determiners lenite the following word.

  3. Irish grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_grammar

    Similarly, if the object of the verbal noun is a pronoun, then it is a possessive pronoun: Tá sé á phlé. "He's discussing it." (lit.: He is at its (i.e. the bicycle's) discussing) More examples: Tá sí do mo bhualadh. "She's hitting me." Tá siad do do phlé. "They are discussing you." Tá sé á pógadh. "He's kissing her." Tá tú dár ...

  4. Irish orthography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_orthography

    Irish orthography is the set of conventions used to write Irish.A spelling reform in the mid-20th century led to An Caighdeán Oifigiúil, the modern standard written form used by the Government of Ireland, which regulates both spelling and grammar. [1]

  5. Possessive determiner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Possessive_determiner

    Possessive determiners commonly have similar forms to personal pronouns. In addition, they have corresponding possessive pronouns, which are also phonetically similar. The following chart shows the English, German, [13] and French personal pronouns, possessive determiners and possessive pronouns.

  6. Colloquial Welsh morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colloquial_Welsh_morphology

    Welsh has special emphatic forms of the personal pronouns. The term 'emphatic pronoun' is misleading since they do not always indicate emphasis. They are perhaps more correctly termed 'conjunctive, connective or distinctive pronouns' since they are used to indicate a connection between or distinction from another nominal element.

  7. Literary Welsh morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_Welsh_morphology

    Similarly, there is some tendency to follow speech and drop the "w" from the second-person plural pronoun chwi in certain modern semi-literary styles. In any case, pronouns are often dropped in the literary language, as the person and number can frequently be discerned from the verb or preposition alone.

  8. Time running out for top free agents, Orioles’ sign Morton ...

    www.aol.com/sports/time-running-top-free-agents...

    Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman discuss where the top remaining free agents might wind up with time running out, the Orioles signing Charlie Morton, Korean free agent Hyeseong Kim joining the ...

  9. Old Irish grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Irish_grammar

    Class B pronouns are used after preverbs historically ending in consonants. They are characterized by starting with /d/, spelled as t or d (the forms beginning with t in the below table can also be sometimes spelled with d) and their irregular fusions with their preverbs. Class C pronouns are used with verbs within a nasalized subordinate clause.