/fˠuəh/, /fˠuə/, [fˠɪə]
OriginFrom Old Irish fúath, úath (“likeness, form”).
- literary, masculineform, shape
- masculinephantom, spectre
- masculinehate, hatred (with do or ar + the person or thing hated)
“Tá fuath agam don áit sin.” — I hate that place.
“Tá fuath agam ar an áit sin.” — I hate that place.
Formsfuatha(genitive, singular) · fuathanna(nominative, plural) · fuatha(nominative, plural) · fuath(indefinite, nominative, singular) · fuathanna(indefinite, nominative, plural) · a fhuath(indefinite, singular, vocative) · a fhuathanna(indefinite, plural, vocative) · fuatha(genitive, indefinite, singular) · fuathanna(genitive, indefinite, plural) · fuath(dative, indefinite, singular) · fuathanna(dative, indefinite, plural) · an fuath(definite, nominative, singular) · na fuathanna(definite, nominative, plural) · an fhuatha(definite, genitive, singular) · na bhfuathanna(definite, genitive, plural) · leis an bhfuath(dative, definite, singular) · don fhuath(dative, definite, singular) · leis na fuathanna(dative, definite, plural) · fuatha(indefinite, nominative, plural) · a fhuatha(indefinite, plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0