Gender neutral language: Difference between revisions
→Irish
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In addition to these other forms of pronouns, The irish language has "prepositional pronouns", which create specific forms of gender pronouns depending on the type of preposition.  | In addition to these other forms of pronouns, The irish language has "prepositional pronouns", which create specific forms of gender pronouns depending on the type of preposition.  | ||
{{Col-begin}}  | |||
{{Col-3}}  | |||
{| class="wikitable"  | |||
|+ {{Lang|ga|ag}} "at"  | |||
|-  | |||
| 1  | |||
| width=120 | {{Lang|ga|agam}} "at me"  | |||
| width=120 | {{Lang|ga|againn}} "at us"  | |||
|-  | |||
| 2  | |||
| {{Lang|ga|agat}} "at you (sg.)"  | |||
| {{Lang|ga|agaibh}} "at you (pl.)"  | |||
|-  | |||
| 3  | |||
| {{Lang|ga|aige}} "at him"<br />{{Lang|ga|aici}} "at her"  | |||
| {{Lang|ga|acu}} "at them"  | |||
|}  | |||
===Titles===    | ===Titles===    | ||
===Family terms===  | ===Family terms===  | ||