The grammar of Early Modern Irish is laid out in a series of grammatical
tracts written by native speakers and intended to teach the most cultivated form of the language to student
bards, lawyers, doctors, administrators, monks, and so on in Ireland and Scotland. The tracts were edited and published by
Osborn Bergin as a supplement to
Ériu between 1916 and 1955 under the title
Irish Grammatical Tracts. and some with commentary and translation by
Lambert McKenna in 1944 as
Bardic Syntactical Tracts. but the present and future tenses were merged: "he will grasp" but "he will not grasp". The fully stressed personal pronouns (which developed during Middle Irish out of Old Irish pronouns that were reserved for copular predicatives) are allowed in object and optionally in subject positions. If the subject is a 1st or 2nd person pronoun stated explicitly, the 3rd person form of the verb is used – most verb forms can take either the synthetic or analytic form, for example "I will speak" can be expressed as (1st sg. form) or (3rd sg. form and 1st sg. pronoun
mé). The singular form is also used with 1st and 2nd person plural pronouns ( "we will speak", "ye will speak") but the 3rd person plural form is used whenever a 3rd person plural subject is expressed ( "the men will speak"). With regards to the pronouns Classical Gaelic (as well as Middle Irish) shows signs of
split ergativity – the pronouns are divided into two sets with partial
ergative-absolutive alignment. The forms used for direct object of transitive verbs (the "object" pronouns) are also used: • as subjects of passive verbs, e.g. "
it is put onto the table" – in Modern Irish these are understood as active autonomous verbs instead, • for subjects of the copula, e.g. "my tongue,
it is my weapon" (feminine
í "it, she" refers back to
mo theanga) – this is continued in Modern Irish, • and they might be optionally used as subjects of intransitive verbs (instead of the "subject" pronouns) – this usage seems to indicate lack of agency or will in the subject, e.g. "the settlement was without a blessing until
it was in the hands of an Irishman". The 3rd usage above disappeared in Modern Irish and even in Classical Gaelic the unmarked and more common pattern is to use the "subject" pronouns like with transitive verbs. The 3rd person subject pronouns are always optional and often dropped in poetry. The infix pronouns inherited from Old Irish are still optionally used in poetry for direct objects, but their use was likely outdated in speech already in the beginning of the Early Modern period. == Literature ==