seòl
Scottish Gaelic
Etymology
From Old Irish séol (“sail; bed, couch; weaving implement, loom; course; manner, way”), a borrowing from Old English seġl, seġel, from Proto-West Germanic *segl.
The verb is from Middle Irish seólaid.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʃɔːɫ̪/
Derived terms
- prìomh-sheòl (“mainsail”)
Conjugation
- Participles
| Tense \ Voice | Active | Passive |
|---|---|---|
| Present | a' seòladh | -- |
| Past | sheòl | sheòladh |
| Future | seòlaidh | seòlar |
| Conditional | sheòladh | sheòltadh |
Derived terms
Mutation
| Scottish Gaelic mutation | |
|---|---|
| Radical | Lenition |
| seòl | sheòl after "an", t-seòl |
| Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs. | |
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