Weather and Feelings in Irish
An Aimsir agus Mothúcháin
Overview
Weather and feelings are two of the most common everyday conversation topics, and in Irish they share a fascinating grammatical connection. Both rely heavily on the verb tá and on prepositional structures that are quite different from English patterns.
For weather, Irish uses the simple structure Tá sé + adjective or verbal noun: Tá sé fuar (It is cold), Tá sé ag cur báistí (It is raining). The subject sé (it/he) is used impersonally, much like English "it" in weather expressions.
Feelings in Irish use a distinctive construction where the emotion is described as being "on" the person rather than something the person "is." The structure is Tá + emotion + ar + person: Tá áthas orm literally means "happiness is on me," which translates as "I am happy." This pattern uses prepositional pronouns — combined forms of prepositions with pronouns — making it essential to learn the forms of ar (on).
How It Works
Weather Expressions
| Irish | English |
|---|---|
| Tá sé fuar. | It is cold. |
| Tá sé te. | It is hot. |
| Tá sé fliuch. | It is wet. |
| Tá sé tirim. | It is dry. |
| Tá sé gaofar. | It is windy. |
| Tá sé grianmhar. | It is sunny. |
| Tá sé ag cur báistí. | It is raining. |
| Tá sé ag cur sneachta. | It is snowing. |
| Tá ceo ann. | It is foggy. (There is fog.) |
Feelings with "ar"
| Irish | English | Literal |
|---|---|---|
| Tá áthas orm. | I am happy. | Happiness is on me. |
| Tá brón orm. | I am sad. | Sadness is on me. |
| Tá eagla orm. | I am afraid. | Fear is on me. |
| Tá fearg orm. | I am angry. | Anger is on me. |
| Tá ocras orm. | I am hungry. | Hunger is on me. |
| Tá tart orm. | I am thirsty. | Thirst is on me. |
| Tá tuirse orm. | I am tired. | Tiredness is on me. |
| Tá iontas orm. | I am surprised. | Surprise is on me. |
Prepositional Pronouns of "ar"
| Person | Form | Example |
|---|---|---|
| mé (I) | orm | Tá áthas orm. |
| tú (you sg.) | ort | Tá ocras ort. |
| sé (he) | air | Tá eagla air. |
| sí (she) | uirthi | Tá brón uirthi. |
| muid (we) | orainn | Tá tuirse orainn. |
| sibh (you pl.) | oraibh | Tá tart oraibh. |
| siad (they) | orthu | Tá fearg orthu. |
Examples in Context
| Irish | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Tá sé fuar inniu. | It is cold today. | Basic weather + time |
| Tá sé ag cur báistí. | It is raining. | Progressive construction |
| Tá áthas orm. | I am happy. | Emotion "on" me |
| Tá eagla orm. | I am afraid. | Same pattern |
| An bhfuil ocras ort? | Are you hungry? | Question form |
| Níl tuirse orm. | I am not tired. | Negative form |
| Tá sé go breá inniu. | It is lovely today. | "go breá" = lovely |
| Tá an-áthas orm bualadh leat. | I am very happy to meet you. | "an-" intensifier |
| Bhí sé fliuch inné. | It was wet yesterday. | Past tense weather |
| Tá brón orm faoi sin. | I am sorry about that. | "faoi" = about |
Common Mistakes
Translating feelings directly from English
- Wrong: Tá mé áthasach (I am happy-adjective)
- Right: Tá áthas orm.
- Why: Irish expresses most feelings with the "Tá + noun + ar + person" structure rather than "Tá + person + adjective."
Using the wrong prepositional pronoun
- Wrong: Tá ocras orm when talking about "her"
- Right: Tá ocras uirthi.
- Why: Each person has a specific prepositional pronoun form. The feminine third-person form of ar is uirthi, not orm.
Confusing weather and feeling structures
- Wrong: Tá fuar orm (intending "I am cold")
- Right: Tá mé fuar. / Tá fuacht orm.
- Why: Physical sensations of temperature on a person use either "Tá mé fuar" or "Tá fuacht orm" (cold is on me), not mixing the two patterns.
Practice Tips
- Each morning, describe the weather in Irish using two or three sentences: Tá sé fuar inniu. Tá sé ag cur báistí. Níl sé grianmhar.
- Throughout the day, check in with yourself and state your feelings in Irish: Tá ocras orm before lunch, Tá tuirse orm in the evening.
Related Concepts
- Prepositional Pronouns — the combined preposition-pronoun forms essential for expressing feelings
Prasyarat
Prepositional PronounsA1Konsep A1 lainnya
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