Scottish Gaelic/Simple Sentences

< Scottish Gaelic

Sentence structure and grammar

The simple sentence

In a simple English sentence, such as 'John drank milk' the subject comes first, then the verb, then the object. In Gaelic, however, the verb comes first, then the subject, then the object. An example of a sentence would therefore be:

John drank milk
Iain /'iən/ John; dh'òl /γəl/ drank; bainne /'banjə/ milk;
word IPA pronunciation meaning
Iain 'iən John
dh' òl γəl drank
dh' òl Iain γəl 'iən Iain drank
bainne 'banjə milk

Other examples of the same type of sentence construction would be the following:

/ha 'anə fuər/
Anna is cold
tha /ha/ is; Anna /'anə/ Anna; fuar /fuər/ cold;
/γəl i su:/
she drank juice
i /i/ she; dh'òl /γəl/ drank; sùgh /su:/ juice
/γəl e ti:/
he drank tea
e /e/ he; dh'òl /γəl/ drank; tì /ti:/ tea
/'xluix i 'awnsən təj/
she played in the house
ì /i/ she; chluich /'xluix/ played; anns an /'awnsən/ in the; taigh /təj/ house
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