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Appendix:Old Irish a future verbs

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

The a-future, which is found in verbs belonging to one of the strong conjugation classes (B I to B V), is characterized by a reduplication of the initial consonant with the vowel i (usually lowered to e when the root vowel is a) as well as the suffix -ā- at the Proto-Celtic stage. The endings are thus basically identical to those of the a subjunctive. It lacks the suffix -s- of the s future, which is why it called an asigmatic future.

The initial consonant of the root is of course lenited after the i of the reduplicating syllable, and in most cases the vowel of the root has been syncopated away.

The future stem is used to form the conditional tense (called “secondary future” in some sources including Thurneysen and Strachan) as well as the future itself.

Some scholars, including Thurneysen and Strachan, refer to this as the reduplicated future, but as the s-future is also characterized by reduplication, that name is not specific enough.

See Category:Old Irish a future verbs for a list of verbs that take the a-future.

Examples of stem formation

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The basic pattern shows a reduplicating syllable with the vowel i:

  • gainithirgigne-
  • daimiddidma-
  • ibidíba- (contracted from *i-iba-, from *ɸi-ɸibā-)

The vowel of the reduplication syllable is lowered to e in:

In the verbs ernaid (to bestow) and aigid (to drive), the future stems are ebra- and ebla- respectively. These go back to Proto-Celtic formations *ɸibrā- and *ɸiblā-, where the b is from earlier ɸ before a liquid. Those two stems ebla- and ebra- were then extended to airid (to plow) and ailid (to nourish). Thus the following four verbs take eb- as the reduplicating syllable:

The é-future verbs (treated in a separate appendix) are a special class of a-future verbs in which the reduplicating vowel has been lengthened to é as a consequence of absorbing the following consonant. This pattern was reinterpreted as a replacement of the stem vowel with é and later became highly productive.

The future tense of téit has the suppletive stem rega- (from *rigā-, from *h₁ergʰ-: Ancient Greek ἔρχομαι (érkhomai)), which is not reduplicated.

Non-deponent endings

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The forms shown below for daimid (to permit) are constructed on the basis of attested endings.

Future
1st sg. 2nd sg. 3rd sg. 1st pl. 2nd pl. 3rd pl. Passive singular Passive plural
Absolute didma didmae didmaid didmaimmi didmaithe didmait didmaithir didmaitir
Conjunct ·didam ·didmae ·didma ·didmam ·didmaid ·didmat ·didmathar ·didmatar
Relative didmas didmaimme didmaite didmathar didmaiter
Conditional
1st sg. 2nd sg. 3rd sg. 1st pl. 2nd pl. 3rd pl. Passive singular Passive plural
·didmainn ·didmatha ·didmad ·didmaimmis ·didmaithe ·didmaitis ·didmaithe ·didmaitis

Deponent endings

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No complete paradigm of the deponent conjugation is attested, but many endings can be deduced on the basis of other conjugations. Taking gainithir (to be born) as an example onto which attested and deduced endings can be added, we can derive the following:

Future
1st sg. 2nd sg. 3rd sg. 1st pl. 2nd pl. 3rd pl. Passive singular Passive plural
Absolute gigniur gignither gignithir gignimmir gignithe gignitir
Conjunct ·gigniur ·gignither ·gignethar ·gignemmar ·gignid ·gignetar
Relative gignethar gignemmar gignetar
Conditional
1st sg. 2nd sg. 3rd sg. 1st pl. 2nd pl. 3rd pl. Passive singular Passive plural
·gigninn ·gignithea ·gigned ·gignimmis ·gignithe ·gignitis

The only deponent verb with an a-future for which passive forms are attested is ro·cluinethar. The future plural form is ·cechlaiter, which is expected; but the future singular form is ·cechlastar and the conditional singular form is ·cechlastai, both of which are s-future forms.

Further reading

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  • Thurneysen, Rudolf (1940) D. A. Binchy and Osborn Bergin, transl., A Grammar of Old Irish, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, →ISBN, §§ 645–56, pages 401–7; reprinted 2017
  • Strachan, John, Bergin, Osborn (1949) Old-Irish Paradigms and Selections from the Old-Irish Glosses, Dublin: Royal Irish Academy, →ISBN, pages 55–58
  • McCone, Kim (1997) The Early Irish Verb (Maynooth Monographs 1), 2nd edition, Maynooth: An Sagart, →ISBN, pages 46–49