About this word
Mise is an emphatic subject pronoun, first person singular, that means I.
Notes
Not to be confused with muise! / mhuise! / muis!, a common exclamation that means, broadly, indeed! / certainly!; also my goodness! Generally used as the very first or very last word in a sentence, or on its own.
The subject pronouns in Irish (conjunctive)
The subject of a sentence is the entity that performs the action of the verb. Thus, pronouns used in place of the subject are called subject pronouns.
- mé (not 'Mé'): I.*
- tú: you.
- sé: he; it (masculine).
- sí: she; it (feminine).
- sinn (Munster) / muid (Connacht ⁊ Ulster): we.*
- sibh: ye (plural).
- siad: they.
*But see the examples.
Examples
- Tá mé: I am. (Connacht ⁊ Ulster.)
- Táim: I am. (Munster; never 'tá mé'.)
- Tá tú: you are.
- Tá sé: he / it is.
- Tá sí: she / it is.
- Tá muid: we are. (Connacht ⁊ Ulster.)
- Táimíd: we are. (Munster; never 'tá sinn'.)
- Tá sibh: ye are.
- Tá siad: they are.
The same subject pronouns' emphatic forms (conjunctive)
- mise (not 'Mise'): I.*
- tusa: you.
- seisean: he; it (masculine).
- sise: she; it (feminine).
- sinn-ne (Munster) / muide (Connacht) / muid-ne (Ulster; pronounced, roughly, 'mwij-ING-yi'): we.*
- sibh-se: ye (plural).
- siad-san: they.
*But again, see the examples.
Examples
- Tá mise: I am. (Connacht ⁊ Ulster.)
- Táim-se: I am. (Munster; never 'tá mise'.)
- Tá tusa: you are.
- Tá seisean: he / it is.
- Tá sise: she / it is.
- Tá muide: we are. (Connacht.)
- Táimíd-ne: we are. (Munster; never 'tá sinn-ne'.)
- Tá muid-ne: we are. (Ulster.)
- Tá sibh-se: ye are.
- Tá siad-san: they are.