frisoirc

Old Irish

Etymology

From frith- +‎ orcaid.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɸʲrʲisˈorʲɡʲ]

Verb

fris·oirc (verbal noun frithorcun)

  1. to hurt, to offend

For quotations using this term, see Citations:frisoirc.

Inflection

Complex, class B I present, t preterite, s future, s subjunctive
active passive
singular plural singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd
present indicative deut. fris·orcai fris·oirc fris·orcat friss·orcar
prot. frithorgat
imperfect indicative deut. fris·orcad fris·oirctis
prot.
preterite deut. fris·ort
prot.
perfect deut. fris·comurt fris·comart fris·comartatar fritum·chomart
prot. ·frithchomart
future deut. friss·iurr fritamm·ior (with infixed pronoun dam-) fris·errat, fris·iurat
prot.
conditional deut.
prot.
present subjunctive deut. fris·orr; fris·comarr (com-form) fris·orrat fris·orratar
prot.
past subjunctive deut. fris·orrad fris·orthe
prot.
imperative fridoirced frithorcaid
verbal noun frithorcun
past participle frithortae
verbal of necessity

Mutation

Mutation of fris·oirc
radical lenition nasalization
fris·oirc
(pronounced with /h/ in h-prothesis environments)
fris·oirc fris·n-oirc

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in Old Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

Further reading