Appendix:Irish pronouns

Irish personal and possessive pronouns are not declined as such, but they do have particular forms.
 * The first person plural has alternative forms (based on sinn and muid).
 * The second person singular may lenite when used objectively (but is subject to the dntls rule).
 * Third person pronouns drop their initial s when used with the copula, and objectively.
 * Emphatic forms add suffixes.

The demonstrative pronoun derives from the article.

See the category list below for other pronoun types: other demonstrative, definite, interrogative, negative, reflexive, relative.

Summary table
The summary table shows the following forms for the personal pronouns:
 * copular: Is é.
 * analytic verbs:
 * as subject, aka conjunctive: Feiceann tú.
 * as object, aka disjunctive: Feiceann sé thú.
 * emphasis: Is mise
 * : mise, tusa, sise, sibhse
 * : (s)eisean, (s)iadsan
 * : sinne, muidne
 * possessive pronouns, not declined.
 * example synthetic, for standard and dialect/archaic forms.

Etymology
The etymology table shows how Irish personal pronouns derive, in whole or in part, from the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European pronouns, and.