-aige

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See also: aige and āigē

Champenois

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Etymology

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Inherited from Old French -age, from Latin -āticum

Suffix

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-aige

  1. Forming nouns with the sense of "action or result of Xing" or, more rarely, "action related to X".
  2. Forming nouns with the sense of "state of being (a) X".
  3. Forming collective nouns.

Middle French

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Suffix

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-aige

  1. Alternative form of -age

Old French

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Suffix

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-aige

  1. Alternative form of -age
    • Ke li Marchis m'envoia son messaige, et li Barrois a por m'amor josté (Conon de Béthune, L'autrier avint en cel autre païs)

Old Irish

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Etymology

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From Proto-Celtic *sagiyos (seeker).

Suffix

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-aige m

  1. Forms nouns from existing nouns, indicating a person who engages in an activity associated with the base noun.
    cenn (end) + ‎-aige → ‎cennaige (merchant)

Inflection

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Masculine io-stem
Singular Dual Plural
Nominative -aige -aigeL -aigiL
Vocative -aigi -aigeL -aigiu
Accusative -aigeN -aigeL -aigiuH
Genitive -aigiL -aigeL -aigeN
Dative -aigiuL -aigib -aigib
Initial mutations of a following adjective:
  • H = triggers aspiration
  • L = triggers lenition
  • N = triggers nasalization

Derived terms

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Category Old Irish terms suffixed with -aige not found

Descendants

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  • Irish: -aí, -aidhe, -oidhe, -uidhe (obsolete), (slender form), -idhe (obsolete slender form)
  • Scottish Gaelic: -iche, -aiche

Suffix

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-aige

  1. genitive singular feminine of -ach

References

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