barra79 wrote:
Does Cé acu? mean "Which of them"?
How would you say in Irish:
Customer: I like that car.
Salesperson: Which one?
or
Customer: I like those dresses.
Salesperson: Which ones?
Could the salesperson have said Cé acu? in both cases?
More like just "which?"
In both these cases, you can just answer
cé acu "Which?"
For the first you could also say:
Cé acu carr ? "Which car?"
Cé acu é ? "Which is it?"
Cé acu carr é ? "Which car is it?"
Cé acu ceann é ? "Which one is it?"
For the second:
Cé acu gúnaí? "Which dresses?"
Cé acu iad ? "Which are they?"
Cé acu gúnaí iad? "Which dresses are they?"
Cé acu cinn iad ? "Which ones are they?"
You might also be able to say just
cé acu ceann ? "which one?" and
cé acu cinn ? "which ones?".
You could also avoid
acu and just say
Cén carr (atá i gceist agat) ? "What/which car (do you mean)?" or
Cé na gúnaí ? "What/which dresses?".
Await confirmation or correction ...