I need air

O Goireasan Akerbeltz
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This preposition is both simple and annoying. Let's start with the simple:

mi thu e i sinn sibh iad
orm ort air oirre oirnn oirbh orra
[ɔrɔm] [ɔRʃd] [ɛrʲ] [ɔRə] [ɔːRNʲ] [ɔrʲɪv] [ɔRə]

Yes, oirre and orra are pronounced the same way because there no longer a disctinction between broad and slender rr in modern Scottish Gaelic. But that's only very rarely confusing in context.

Air, lots of air

Unfortunately, yes. You'll most likely first meet air meaning "on" like air bòrd "on board" and be told that there's no lenition after air. Yay, you think. The you run into deich air fhichead and you just file it under it's a number, maybe a special case. Then you bump into beag air bheag and maybe it looks a bit strange but you just learn it as a phrase. But as you progress and run into air chor-eigin and air bheag airgid you begin to wonder about the "no lenition", not to mention that many of these don't really fit the translation of "on".

Your confusion is justified. What makes this so confusing is that what looks like air is actually the result of 4 different words all ending up with the same spelling. Don't worry, this isn't going to be as bad as The many functions of a.

Work in Progress

On

The easy one first. In the sense of "on", air comes from Old Irish for (which went form, fort, for, foir etc) and didn't lenite in Old Irish either. Hence the following with no lenition (without the definite article or possessives of course):

  • air bòrd "on a table"
  • air ceann "on a head"
  • air màthraichean "on mothers"

etc

After

The next one is air in the sense of "after". This also doesn't cause lenition and comes from Old Irish íar. In Old Irish, íar caused nasalization but as that disappeared from Scottish Gaelic, we were left with it just not doing anything.

  • air tuiteam "after falling, having fallen"
  • air bruidhinn "after speaking, having spoken"
  • air falbh "after leaving, having left, gone, away"

Over/Past

The last fairly simple one. This one ultimately comes from thar "over, past" which traditionally lenites and takes the genitive and (though not always consistently):

  • thar chuantan/chuan "across the ocean(s)"
  • thar cheann "altogether, on average"
  • thar bheann "over the mountains" (i.e. the other side)

Mostly you'll meet this in the form of ar or air in numbers involving twenty: deich ar/air fhichead, so literally "10 past 20".


The tricky one



Roimhearan
á - aig - air - ann an - de ⁊ a - do ⁊ a - eadar - fo - gu - le - mu - o ⁊ bho - os ⁊ fos - ri - tro - thar