concná
Old Irish
    
    Etymology
    
From com- + Proto-Celtic *knāyeti. A hapax legomenon only found once in the folk-etymological glossary Sanas Cormaic, made c. 900.
Verb
    
con·cná (verbal noun cocnam)
- (hapax) to chew
- c. 900, Sanas Cormaic, from Bodleian MS Laud 610, Corm. La 2
- Con·cná in fili mír do charnu dirg muice ł chon no chaitt ⁊ da·bir iarum for licc iar cul na comlad ⁊ di·chain dichetal fair...- The poet chews on a piece of flesh from a red pig, a dog, or a cat, and puts it afterwards on the flag[stone] behind the door, and recites an incantation on it...
 
 
 
- c. 900, Sanas Cormaic, from Bodleian MS Laud 610, Corm. La 2
Inflection
    
Complex, class A III present
| 1st sg. | 2nd sg. | 3rd sg. | 1st pl. | 2nd pl. | 3rd pl. | Passive sg. | Passive pl. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present indicative | Deut. | con·cná | |||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Imperfect indicative | Deut. | ||||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Preterite | Deut. | ||||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Perfect | Deut. | ||||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Future | Deut. | ||||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Conditional | Deut. | ||||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Present subjunctive | Deut. | ||||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Past subjunctive | Deut. | ||||||||
| Prot. | |||||||||
| Imperative | |||||||||
| Verbal noun | cocnam | ||||||||
| Past participle | |||||||||
| Verbal of necessity | |||||||||
Descendants
    
Mutation
    
| Old Irish mutation | ||
|---|---|---|
| Radical | Lenition | Nasalization | 
| con·cná | con·chná | con·cná pronounced with /-ɡ(ʲ)-/ | 
| Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs. | ||
Further reading
    
- G. Toner, M. Ní Mhaonaigh, S. Arbuthnot, D. Wodtko, M.-L. Theuerkauf, editors (2019), “con-cnaí”, in eDIL: Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
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