-óg
Irish
Alternative forms
- -eog (used after a slender consonant)
Etymology
From Old Irish -óc (compare Scottish Gaelic -ag, Manx -ag), borrowed from Proto-Brythonic *-ọg, from Proto-Celtic *-ākos. Doublet of -ach.
Suffix
-óg f
- used to form diminutives of nouns, or substantive nouns out of nominal, verbal, or adjectival roots
- ciar (“black”) + -óg → ciaróg (“beetle”)
- leadhb (“strip”) + -óg → leadhbóg (“shred, tatter”)
- milis (“sweet”) + -óg → milseog (“dessert”)
- pit (“vulva, vagina”) + -óg → piteog (“effeminate man, sissy, queer”)
- reoite (“frozen”) + -óg → reoiteog (“ice cream”)
- scréach (“screech”) + -óg → scréachóg (“jay”)
- straois (“grin, grimace”) + -óg → straoiseog (“smiley, emoticon”)
Declension
Declension of -óg
Second declension
Bare forms
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Forms with the definite article
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Derived terms
► <a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Irish_words_suffixed_with_-%C3%B3g' title='Category:Irish words suffixed with -óg'>Irish words suffixed with -óg</a>
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