We'll buy tickets at the door
Ceannaichidh sinn na tiocaidean aig an doras
This conversation was all about looking ahead. We saw and heard examples in the future tense of all of the ten irregular verbs, as well as a few regular verbs. Let's start with the regular verbs.
‑idh | ‑aidh
In the previous lesson we looked at the future forms of faod (may) and feum (need/must). Here we'll look at how to ask direct questions in the future tense using the regular verb ceannaich (buy). It follows the same pattern as another regular verb coinnich (meet) which we saw in A2 Cuspair 8 .
coinnich! | meet! (future/habitual)
We make the future tense of regular verbs by adding ‑idh , or ‑aidh to the root form of the verb (remembering the caol ri caol, leathann ri leathann rule). With ceannaich , we add ‑idh to ceannaich and this gives us ceannaichidh . And we have the usual four forms for the future tense in the table below. And … bear in mind that cha causes lenition in the word that follows.
ceannaich! | buy! (future/habitual)
Let's look at some more examples
The positive responses:
The negative responses: