Irish
Etymology
From breac- (“middling, partly”) + Gaeltacht (“Irish-speaking area”).
Noun
Breac-Ghaeltacht f (genitive singular Breac-Ghaeltachta, nominative plural Breac-Ghaeltachtaí)
- mixed Irish- and English-speaking districts
Declension
Declension of Breac-Ghaeltacht (third declension)
| bare forms
|
|
|
singular
|
plural
|
| nominative
|
Breac-Ghaeltacht
|
Breac-Ghaeltachtaí
|
| vocative
|
a Bhreac-Ghaeltacht
|
a Bhreac-Ghaeltachtaí
|
| genitive
|
Breac-Ghaeltachta
|
Breac-Ghaeltachtaí
|
| dative
|
Breac-Ghaeltacht
|
Breac-Ghaeltachtaí
|
| forms with the definite article
|
|
|
singular
|
plural
|
| nominative
|
an Bhreac-Ghaeltacht
|
na Breac-Ghaeltachtaí
|
| genitive
|
na Breac-Ghaeltachta
|
na mBreac-Ghaeltachtaí
|
| dative
|
leis an mBreac-Ghaeltacht don Bhreac-Ghaeltacht
|
leis na Breac-Ghaeltachtaí
|
|
Mutation
Mutated forms of Breac-Ghaeltacht
| radical
|
lenition
|
eclipsis
|
| Breac-Ghaeltacht
|
Bhreac-Ghaeltacht
|
mBreac-Ghaeltacht
|
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
References