ágar

See also: agar, Agar, and agár

Irish

Etymology

Borrowed from English augur, from Latin.

Noun

ágar m (genitive singular ágair, nominative plural ágair)

  1. (Ancient Rome) augur

Declension

Declension of ágar (first declension)
bare forms
singular plural
nominative ágar ágair
vocative a ágair a ágara
genitive ágair ágar
dative ágar ágair
forms with the definite article
singular plural
nominative an t-ágar na hágair
genitive an ágair na n-ágar
dative leis an ágar
don ágar
leis na hágair

Mutation

Mutated forms of ágar
radical eclipsis with h-prothesis with t-prothesis
ágar n-ágar hágar t-ágar

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

References

Phalura

Etymology

From Urdu اگر (agar), from Persian [Term?].

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /áɡar/

Conjunction

ágar (conjunction, Perso-Arabic spelling اگر)

  1. if
  2. supposing

References

  • Henrik Liljegren, Naseem Haider (2011) “ágar”, in Palula Vocabulary (FLI Language and Culture Series; 7)‎[1], Islamabad, Pakistan: Forum for Language Initiatives, →ISBN