múisiamach

Irish

Etymology

From múisiam (upset; mental disturbance; peevishness, pique; feeling of sickness, nausea; heaviness, dullness, drowsiness) +‎ -ach.

Adjective

múisiamach (genitive singular masculine múisiamaigh, genitive singular feminine múisiamaí, plural múisiamacha, comparative múisiamaí)

  1. upset; perturbed, irritated
  2. feeling sick
  3. heavy, dull, drowsy

Declension

Declension of múisiamach
Positive singular plural
masculine feminine strong noun weak noun
nominative múisiamach mhúisiamach múisiamacha;
mhúisiamacha2
vocative mhúisiamaigh múisiamacha
genitive múisiamaí múisiamacha múisiamach
dative múisiamach;
mhúisiamach1
mhúisiamach;
mhúisiamaigh (archaic)
múisiamacha;
mhúisiamacha2
Comparative níos múisiamaí
Superlative is múisiamaí

1 When the preceding noun is lenited and governed by the definite article.
2 When the preceding noun ends in a slender consonant.

Mutation

Mutated forms of múisiamach
radical lenition eclipsis
múisiamach mhúisiamach not applicable

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

References