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  2. Welsh syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_syntax

    Any verb may be inflected for three tenses (preterite, future, and unreality), and a range of additional tenses are constructed with auxiliary verbs and particles. Welsh lacks true subordinating conjunctions, and instead relies on special verb forms and preverbal particles to create subordinate clauses.

  3. Indo-European copula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_copula

    In the Celtic languages there is a distinction between the so-called substantive verb, used when the predicate is an adjective phrase or prepositional phrase, and the so-called copula, used when the predicate is a noun. The conjugation of the Old Irish and Middle Welsh verbs is as follows:

  4. Colloquial Welsh morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colloquial_Welsh_morphology

    Verb-nouns following an indirect object, i.e. rhaid i mi fynd ('I must go'). Inflected verbs in the interrogative and negative (also frequently, in the spoken language, the affirmative), though this should strictly be the 'mixed mutation'. The occurrence of the soft mutation often obscures the origin of placenames to non-Welsh-speaking visitors.

  5. Welsh grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_grammar

    Welsh grammar reflects the patterns of linguistic structure that permeate the use of the Welsh language. In linguistics grammar refers to the domains of the syntax , and morphology . The following articles contain more information on Welsh:

  6. Literary Welsh morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_Welsh_morphology

    Verbs conjugate for person, tense and mood with affirmative, interrogative and negative conjugations of some verbs. A majority of prepositions inflect for person and number. There are few case inflections in Literary Welsh, being confined to certain pronouns. Modern Welsh can be written in two varieties – Colloquial Welsh or Literary Welsh ...

  7. Verbnoun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verbnoun

    In Celtic languages such as Welsh, a verb-noun (or verbnoun) is used to refer to the basic form of a verb and is the form usually listed in a dictionary (for example, in the 'Modern Welsh Dictionary' [1]). In Welsh for example, it is frequently used in conjunction with an auxiliary verb to form a periphrastic verb.

  8. Welsh language sign found in Prague McDonald's - AOL

    www.aol.com/welsh-language-sign-found-prague...

    The last thing you would expect to find on your holiday in the Czech Republic is a sign warning you about a wet floor written in Welsh. But that is exactly what happened to Dion Jones, from ...

  9. Zero copula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_copula

    There is a contrast between the regular verb "to be" and the copulative/auxiliary verb "to be" in Turkish. The auxiliary verb imek shows its existence only through suffixes to predicates that can be nouns, adjectives or arguably conjugated verb stems, arguably being the only irregular verb in Turkish. In the third person, zero copula is the ...