treabh
Appearance
Irish
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]From Old Irish treb (“house, farm, homestead, tribe”).[1] Cognate to Welsh tref (“town; home”). The meaning “tribe” is perhaps due to influence from Latin tribus.
Noun
[edit]treabh f (genitive singular treibhe, nominative plural treibheanna)
Declension
[edit]
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Related terms
[edit]Etymology 2
[edit]From Old Irish trebaid (“to occupy, inhabit; cultivate, plough”), from treb (“house, farm, homestead”).
Verb
[edit]treabh (present analytic treabhann, future analytic treabhfaidh, verbal noun treabhadh, past participle treafa)
- (transitive, intransitive) to plough, to plough through
Conjugation
[edit]conjugation of treabh (first conjugation – A)
* indirect relative
† archaic or dialect form
‡‡ dependent form used with particles that trigger eclipsis
- Alternative past participle: treabhaite
Derived terms
[edit]Mutation
[edit]radical | lenition | eclipsis |
---|---|---|
treabh | threabh | dtreabh |
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
References
[edit]- ^ Gregory Toner, Sharon Arbuthnot, Máire Ní Mhaonaigh, Marie-Luise Theuerkauf, Dagmar Wodtko, editors (2019), “treb”, in eDIL: Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
Further reading
[edit]- Ó Dónaill, Niall (1977) “treabh”, in Foclóir Gaeilge–Béarla, Dublin: An Gúm, →ISBN
Categories:
- Irish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Irish terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Irish terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *treb-
- Irish terms inherited from Old Irish
- Irish terms derived from Old Irish
- Irish lemmas
- Irish nouns
- Irish feminine nouns
- Irish second-declension nouns
- Irish verbs
- Irish transitive verbs
- Irish intransitive verbs
- Irish first-conjugation verbs of class A