Breandán wrote:
Madadh óg atá ann is actually short for Is madadh óg atá ann. "It is a young dog that is there."
This
ann is not ‘there’ generically speaking, but a more literal ‘in it (him)’.
In the same way as you can say
tá sé ina XYZ, you can also turn this on its head and say
XYZ atá ann. Had it been
tá sí ina hXYZ or
tá siad ina nXYZ, it would have been
XYZ atá inti/iontu.
(There is a tendency to use
ann instead of
inti if the word is only grammatically feminine, but not obviously semantically so. So while many older Ulster speakers would still say
leabaidh atá inti, most younger speakers would probably say
leabaidh atá ann, because a bed is not semantically any particular gender)
Yes, good point. Simply put, ann = i + é in this case. Am I right in saying that?