^ there are three masculine nouns in the 2nd declension:im, sliabh, teach ^ genitive singular in í comes from nouns in ‑(e)ach: ighe -> í ^ "-" means...
masculine and feminine. The gender of nouns in each declension is somewhat mixed, but there are clear patterns. Irish nouns undergo initial mutations. The defining...
Irish fifth declension is made up primarily of feminine nouns; however, male familial nouns (e.g. athair), and the ordinals 20, 30 etc. (e.g. fiche,...
The Irish fourth declension is made up primarily of masculine nouns; however, abstract nouns ending in a vowel tend to be feminine (eagla, aigne). The nominative...
monosyllabic nouns of the third declension ending in a wide range of broad and slender consonants. However, there are many polysyllabic nouns with typical...
Irish fifth declension is made up primarily of feminine nouns; however, male familial nouns (e.g. athair), and the cardinals 20, 30 etc. (e.g. fiche...
The Irish fourth declension is made up primarily of masculine nouns; however, abstract nouns ending in a vowel are nearly always feminine (eagla, aigne)...
nouns of the third declension end in a wide range of broad and slender consonants, e.g., droim m, fuil f, gleann m. There are many polysyllabic nouns...
Mahagaja Early versions, for posterity. Nouns, 16 February 2018 Nouns 3rd, 04 February 2018 Nouns 4th, 28 January 2018 Nouns 5th, 31 January 2018 Adjectives,...
declensions, each with the same case structure as the nouns they qualify. The adjectives agree with nouns in gender, case and plurality. Irish adjectives are...