A2

Ordinal Numbers and Quantities in Irish

Orduimhreacha agus Méideanna

Overview

After learning cardinal numbers, the next step is ordinal numbers (first, second, third) and quantity expressions (a lot, a little, enough). These are essential for talking about sequences, rankings, dates, and amounts in everyday conversation.

Irish ordinal numbers have some unique features. The first two — an chéad (first) and an dara (second) — are irregular and behave differently from the rest. From an tríú (third) onward, ordinals follow a regular pattern using the suffix (or -iú). Importantly, an chéad causes lenition on the following noun, which is a mutation pattern you should watch for.

Quantity expressions in Irish often use genitive constructions. Words like a lán (a lot), beagán (a little), roinnt (some), and go leor (enough/plenty) are followed by a noun in the genitive case. At this level, you can start using these expressions even before fully mastering the genitive, by learning common fixed phrases.

How It Works

Ordinal Numbers

Ordinal Irish Mutation
1st an chéad + lenition
2nd an dara / an darna no mutation
3rd an tríú no mutation
4th an ceathrú no mutation
5th an cúigiú no mutation
6th an séú no mutation
7th an seachtú no mutation
8th an t-ochtú no mutation
9th an naoú no mutation
10th an deichiú no mutation

Examples with Ordinals

Irish English
an chéad lá the first day
an dara duine the second person
an tríú háit the third place
an ceathrú huair the fourth time

Quantity Expressions

Irish English Usage
a lán a lot (of) Tá a lán daoine ann.
go leor enough / plenty Tá go leor ama agam.
roinnt some roinnt airgid (some money)
beagán a little / a few beagán Gaeilge (a little Irish)
mórán much / many Níl mórán ama agam.
cúpla a couple / a few cúpla ceist (a couple of questions)
neart plenty (informal) Tá neart bia ann.

Examples in Context

Irish English Note
an chéad lá the first day "chéad" causes lenition
an dara duine the second person No mutation after "dara"
Tá a lán daoine ann. There are a lot of people. Genitive plural
Tá beagán Gaeilge agam. I have a little Irish. Genitive: Gaeilge
an tríú huair the third time h-prefix before vowel
Tá go leor ama againn. We have enough time. Genitive: am → ama
Cúpla ceist agam. I have a couple of questions. "cúpla" + singular noun
Níl mórán airgid agam. I don't have much money. "mórán" in negative
an chéad cheann eile the next one (first other one) Lenition after "chéad"
Roinnt daoine some people Genitive plural

Common Mistakes

Forgetting lenition after "an chéad"

  • Wrong: an chéad lá is correct, but an chéad duine without lenition would be wrong
  • Right: an chéad duine → an chéad dhuine
  • Why: An chéad causes lenition on the following noun: duine → dhuine.

Treating "cúpla" like other quantity words

  • Wrong: cúpla ceisteanna (plural noun)
  • Right: cúpla ceist (singular noun)
  • Why: Unlike other quantity expressions, cúpla is followed by the singular form of the noun.

Using "mórán" in positive sentences

  • Wrong: Tá mórán airgid agam
  • Right: Tá a lán airgid agam. (positive) / Níl mórán airgid agam. (negative)
  • Why: Mórán is typically used in negative sentences and questions. For positive statements, use a lán.

Practice Tips

  1. Practice ordinals by listing the days of a schedule or the steps of a process: an chéad rud, an dara rud, an tríú rud...
  2. Describe quantities of things around you using different expressions: a lán leabhar (a lot of books), beagán uisce (a little water), go leor bia (enough food).

Related Concepts

  • Numbers — the cardinal number system that ordinals build upon

Prerequisite

Numbers in IrishA1

More A2 concepts

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