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1 brittonsk
subst. Brythonic, Brittonic -
2 airneis
airneis, àirneis(M`L. & D.), furniture; Irish áirneis, cattle, goods, etc., Middle Irish airnis, tools, furniture. The word can hardly be separated from the Romance arnese, accotrements, armour, whence English harness, armour for man or horse. The word is originally of Brittonic origin (Breton harnez, armour), from *eisarno-, iron; See iarunn. -
3 àirneis
airneis, àirneis(M`L. & D.), furniture; Irish áirneis, cattle, goods, etc., Middle Irish airnis, tools, furniture. The word can hardly be separated from the Romance arnese, accotrements, armour, whence English harness, armour for man or horse. The word is originally of Brittonic origin (Breton harnez, armour), from *eisarno-, iron; See iarunn. -
4 blian
Ithe flank, groin, Irish bléin, Early Irish blén, Old Irish melen, for mleen, *mlakno-; Greek $$G malakós, soft (Strachan, Stokes). The meaning, if not the phonetics, is not quite satisfactory.IIlean, insipid, blianach, lean flesh; cf. Welsh blin, tired, Old Breton blinion, inertes. These may be referred to *$$gleghno-, Lithuanian glez$$?nus, tender, weak, Greek $$G blchrós, languid. See, however, the derivation suggested for blian, above. For the Brittonic words, Stokes has suggested the stem blêno-; Sanskrit glána, tired. -
5 bucaid
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6 deóradh
an alien, Irish deóraidh, a stranger, exile, Middle Irish deorad. Stokes thinks the word is borrowed from Brittonic - Breton devroet, depaysé, "dis-countrified" ( di-brog-, See brugh), Cornish diures, exul. deòradh: opposite of urradh, guarantor, = di-urradh (Jub.). air-rad (Meyer). Hence the name Dewar. -
7 geamhradh
winter, Irish geimhreadh, Early Irish gemred, Old Irish gaimred, Old Welsh gaem, Welsh gauaf, Cornish goyf, Breton goam, Middle Breton gouaff: *gimo- (for Gadelic), *gaiamo-, *gaimo- (for Brittonic, Stokes); Indo-European ghim, gheim, ghiem; Sanskrit himá, cold, Zend zima, winter; Church Slavonic zima; Greek $$Gheimw/n; Latin hiems. The Old Irish gam, for gem, has its vowel influenced by the analogy of samh of samhradh( Thurneysen). Thurneysen now suggests Celt. *giamo; cf. Gaulish Giamillus. -
8 maois
a large basket, hamper, maois-eisg, five hundred fish, Irish maois, Welsh mwys, hamper, five score herring, Cornish muis, moys; Scottish mese, five hundred herring, Norse meiss, box, wicker basket, meiss síld, barrel-herrings, Old High German meisa, a basket for the back; Lithuanian maiszas, sack, Church Slavonic me$$?chu$$u. The relationship, whether of affinity or borrowing, between Celtic and Teutonic, is doubtful. The Brittonic might come from Latin mensa, a table, and the Gadelic from the Norse. -
9 os
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10 sabhal
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11 saor
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12 sgìth
tired, Irish sgíth, weariness, Old Irish scíth, Cornish sqwyth, skîth, Breton skouîz, skuîz: *skîto-, *skîtto- (Brittonic *skvîtto-, according to Stokes); rrot skhei beside khsei, decay, destroy, Greek $$G fqíw, $$G fqísis, phthisis, Sanskrit kshi, destroy, kshitás, exhausted (Strachan, Bez.Beit.$$+17 300). -
13 uile
all, the whole, Irish uile, Old Irish uile, huile: *polio-s, root pol, pel, full, many, Greek $$G pollós (= $$G polios), much, many; See iol-. Stokes and most philologists refer it to *oljo-s, English all, German all, Gothic alls (*olnó-s, Mayhew). Some have derived it from *soli-, Latin sollus, whole, Greek $$Go$$`los, whence Stokes deduces the Brittonic words - Welsh oll, all, Cornish hol, Breton holl, oll (see slàn).
См. также в других словарях:
Brittonic — [bri tän′ik] adj. [< L Britto, gen. Brittonis (see BRITON) + IC] BRYTHONIC … English World dictionary
Brittonic — adjective Etymology: Latin Britton , Britto Briton Date: 1923 Brythonic … New Collegiate Dictionary
Brittonic — /bri ton ik/, adj. Brythonic. [ < LL Britton(es) (see BRITON) + IC] * * * … Universalium
Brittonic — [brɪ tɒnɪk] adjective &noun variant of Brythonic … English new terms dictionary
brittonic — brit·ton·ic … English syllables
Brittonic — Brit•ton•ic [[t]brɪˈtɒn ɪk[/t]] n. adj. peo Brythonic • Etymology: < LL Brittōn(ēs) … From formal English to slang
brittonic — (ˈ)bri|tänik adjective Usage: usually capitalized Etymology: Latin Britton , Britto Briton + English ic more at briton : brythonic 2 … Useful english dictionary
Brythonic languages — For the individual language, see British language (Celtic). Brythonic Brittonic Geographic distribution: Wales, Cornwall, Brittany Linguistic classification: Indo European … Wikipedia
John T. Koch — John Koch, diplômé de l’Université de Harvard, est professeur de langue et littérature celtiques à l’University of Wales et directeur du Centre for Advanced Welsh Celtic Studies. Publications An Atlas for Celtic Studies: Archaeology and Names in… … Wikipédia en Français
British language — For other uses, see British language (disambiguation). For the language family, see Brythonic languages. British Spoken in Iron Age Britain, south of the Firth of Forth Extinct Developed into Old Welsh, Cumbric, Cornish and Breton by 600 AD … Wikipedia
Cornish language — For the Anglo Cornish accent and dialect, see Anglo Cornish. Cornish Kernowek, Kernewek Pronunciation [kərˈnuːək] Spoken in … Wikipedia