Prepositional Pronouns
Forainmneacha Réamhfhoclacha
Prepositional Pronouns in Irish
Overview
Prepositional pronouns are one of the most distinctive features of Irish grammar. When a preposition meets a personal pronoun, they fuse into a single word. English says "at me," but Irish says agam — one word combining the preposition ag (at) with mé (me). This happens with every simple preposition and every pronoun, creating a rich system of forms.
At the A1 level, prepositional pronouns are essential because they appear in some of the most common expressions in the language. "I have" is expressed as "Tá ... agam" (literally, "there is ... at me"). "I am sorry" is "Tá brón orm" (sadness is on me). "I like" is "Is maith liom" (it is good with me). You simply cannot speak Irish without these forms.
Each preposition has a full set of pronoun forms — seven for each — so there are many forms to learn. The good news is that patterns repeat across prepositions, and the most common ones (ag, ar, le, do) will carry you through most conversations.
How It Works
The preposition "ag" (at) — used for possession
| Person | Form | English |
|---|---|---|
| 1st sg. | agam | at me (I have) |
| 2nd sg. | agat | at you (you have) |
| 3rd sg. m. | aige | at him (he has) |
| 3rd sg. f. | aici | at her (she has) |
| 1st pl. | againn | at us (we have) |
| 2nd pl. | agaibh | at you all (you have) |
| 3rd pl. | acu | at them (they have) |
The preposition "ar" (on) — used for feelings/states
| Person | Form | English |
|---|---|---|
| 1st sg. | orm | on me |
| 2nd sg. | ort | on you |
| 3rd sg. m. | air | on him |
| 3rd sg. f. | uirthi | on her |
| 1st pl. | orainn | on us |
| 2nd pl. | oraibh | on you all |
| 3rd pl. | orthu | on them |
The preposition "le" (with) — used for likes/opinions
| Person | Form | English |
|---|---|---|
| 1st sg. | liom | with me |
| 2nd sg. | leat | with you |
| 3rd sg. m. | leis | with him |
| 3rd sg. f. | léi | with her |
| 1st pl. | linn | with us |
| 2nd pl. | libh | with you all |
| 3rd pl. | leo | with them |
Examples in Context
| Irish | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Tá leabhar agam. | I have a book. | ag + mé = agam |
| Tá brón orm. | I am sorry. | ar + mé = orm |
| Is maith liom é. | I like it. | le + mé = liom |
| Tá a fhios aige. | He knows. | ag + é = aige |
| Tá áthas uirthi. | She is happy. | ar + í = uirthi |
| An bhfuil carr agat? | Do you have a car? | ag + tú = agat |
| Tá eagla orthu. | They are afraid. | ar + iad = orthu |
| Tá sé leat. | It is with you / yours. | le + tú = leat |
| Tabhair dom é. | Give it to me. | do + mé = dom |
| Cad atá uait? | What do you want? | ó + tú = uait |
Common Mistakes
Separating the preposition and pronoun
- Wrong: Tá leabhar ag mé
- Right: Tá leabhar agam
- Why: In Irish, the preposition and pronoun must be combined into a single word. They are never used separately.
Mixing up similar-sounding forms
- Wrong: Tá brón agam (meaning "I have sadness" — unidiomatic)
- Right: Tá brón orm (sadness is on me)
- Why: Different prepositions express different relationships. Feelings use ar (on), not ag (at). Learn which preposition goes with which expression.
Forgetting the feminine third-person forms
- Wrong: Tá a fhios aige (referring to a woman)
- Right: Tá a fhios aici
- Why: The third-person forms differ by gender. Aige is masculine (at him), aici is feminine (at her).
Practice Tips
- Start with the ag forms since they express possession — the most frequent construction. Drill "Tá ___ agam/agat/aige/aici/againn/agaibh/acu" until it is automatic.
- Learn common expressions as fixed phrases: "Tá ocras orm" (I'm hungry), "Tá brón orm" (I'm sorry), "Is maith liom" (I like). The expressions will teach you the prepositional pronouns naturally.
- Make a grid of the three most common prepositions (ag, ar, le) with all seven person forms and review it daily.
Related Concepts
- Possession — builds on ag-forms for expressing ownership
- Modal Expressions — uses prepositional pronouns with le and do
- Weather and Feelings — uses ar-forms for emotions and weather
- Body and Health — health expressions with ar
- Common Idiomatic Constructions — idiomatic uses of prepositional pronouns
- Idiomatic Expressions — advanced idioms built on these forms
Prerequisite
Simple PrepositionsA1Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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