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1 ceòl
music, Irish, Early Irish ceól, g. ciúil, *kipolo-, a Gadelicised form of *pipolo; onomatopoetic root pi$$-p, Latin pîpilo, chirp, pipilum, outcry, pîpo, chirp, Anglo-Saxon pípe, English pipe (hence Welsh pib, Gaelic pìob, etc.). Stokes and Rhys have given a Celtic qeqlo- for stem, allied to Welsh pib, pipe. For phonetics, See feòil. Stokes now suggests alliance with German heulen, hoot, howl, Old High German hiuwilôn.
См. также в других словарях:
heuwilōn — *heuwilōn germ., schwach. Verb: nhd. jubeln, heulen; ne. rejoice, howl (Verb); Rekontruktionsbasis: mnd., ahd.; Etymologie: s. ing. *kā̆u , *kē̆u , *kū … Germanisches Wörterbuch
kā̆ u-, kē̆ u-, kū- — kā̆ u , kē̆ u , kū English meaning: to howl Deutsche Übersetzung: ,heulen” Note: onomatopoeic words, partly with anlaut. k, partly with k̂. Material: O.Ind. kü uti ‘shouts, howls”, Intens. kōkūyate ‘schreit, sounds, seufzt”… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary