Download Volume 1 - Electric Scotland
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.<br />
happy,<br />
',<br />
ira.,<br />
.<br />
pi.<br />
i<br />
|<br />
j<br />
I<br />
!<br />
A'jiue-n;v-Ceusa'jh, see aoibhneach.<br />
2 Like a cacerpillar.<br />
-<br />
/. Sign, mark, omen, token. 'aointe, see uojiDa.<br />
lich,** v. Explain an omen.<br />
jaoin, pr.p'. ag aonadh, y.a. Unite, join. Air<br />
aoh, -eiche a Pleasant, cheerful, glad, aouadh ris, joined to him.<br />
agreeable. A' toirt sg6il aoiu. yen.aiuj. i/f aou. Lamh guch aoin, the<br />
aoibhnich, mving gltd tidingt.<br />
hand of cvry inn.<br />
is, s.iii. Gladness joy. pleasure. :tai>m, */. Ru.^h. 2 Honour. 3 see Aoine.<br />
-hlighe, the j, -ai.s, see auireadh.<br />
jaoireacv.d, s.J'.ind. Lampooning, satirizing.<br />
\<br />
. ii.<br />
V see ao-d ..<br />
Aoi-diouaeh, 2*Libtl.<br />
oi-diooachd chd, J<br />
-ridh, -'-idhean, s.m. Lampooning,<br />
>n.si.ig. of aog.<br />
i satiriij.ijg. 2**Ooriier of a >ail. 3ttCursiug.<br />
oigh, -e, -UAH A -eanna, *.w. Stranger, guest,<br />
(for aoghaire&n) pi. of aoghair.<br />
Mer. 2**Skilful person. f3**Hero. aoirid h,. ,'*/. a/. CL of v. aoir.<br />
-e, -ean, s.f. see aoibh.<br />
see aonagaich.<br />
.<br />
'it,** -eich, s.m. Guest, stranger. 2 aoirneagan,* see auuagail. 'G a. 'na fhuil,<br />
Hospitable person.<br />
weltering in 7w's blood.<br />
see aoigheiL 2ffBeggary.<br />
aoirneagain,* see aonaail.<br />
Aoigheachd, s.f .ind. Entertainment, lodging, aois, -e, s.f. Age. 2 Old age. 3 Antiquity.<br />
ility. 2 see aoibheachd. Air aoigheachd,<br />
enjoying hospitality ; thug iad a. mairg a dh'iarradh an aoise !<br />
D4 'n aois a tha thu P what is your ay? f is<br />
pity him that<br />
dhuinn, they lod'jed or entertained us ; a. wishes eztrerne old age ! air son 'aoise, fo* its<br />
in, siu.ib.ad, si&thad, a bhean-an- antiquity ; iarguinn na h-aoise, the evil effect*<br />
(taigoe, cha'n 'eil thu a* gabhail sion, the of old age; bha Noah coig ceud bliadhna dh*<br />
tUuri /, help yourself goodwife, aois, N. icas 50& years old ; aim an Ian aois,<br />
yon rs not tukuvj annthini (<br />
the churlish host in<br />
i of attending to the full age 'nuair a ;<br />
thig thugu h-aois; ivhen<br />
guest is attending you come<br />
wu age ; tha ni'aois fo dhoruinn, my<br />
wifj) ; a. Thorinaid mh6ir, fuirich, age id sorrowful; aois leisgein, ceitbir tichead<br />
ri muir-traigh, is tri fichead ri muir-lan,<br />
fuiricn, t-ba a' chearc 'sa' chliabb agus a'<br />
bheau'srv' n * in the creel and the wife 's at the lin, the sluggard's age, eighty at loiv-ivater,<br />
thore, (this meant a wholesome diet of egss sixty at high-water, and scarcely twenty when<br />
*nd shtfll-hs i, and illustrates well that true there's a full moon. (At low-water, while the<br />
Highland hospitality which gladly share its sea-ware is being gathered for manure, the<br />
all, however little that u;ay be, with a sluggard in as feeble as a man of eighty,<br />
stranger.)<br />
at ni.;i. -water, when less difficult work is<br />
aoigheachdach, -aich, ?.w. Sorner, one who engaged In, ne is a little livelier, but still<br />
taxes the hospiraliiy oi his friends too much. incapable of much exertion, but when night<br />
be moonlight,<br />
ilaclul, see aoibheachd.<br />
comes, especially if there should<br />
., -eala.<br />
cheeriul.<br />
a s>t- ;u> : i.'r.eil. ? Hospitable,<br />
An young fellow oi<br />
Kaiiin a., the hatpitabu strip-<br />
twenty, and probably walks many miles ou<br />
courting errands.)<br />
aoi:jhean,<br />
n.pl. of aoigli.<br />
:'.oi*,x.f.pi. People, community of any particularkind,<br />
designated by us adjacent. Aois-<br />
i*n.rina. of aol.<br />
*./. The mouth.<br />
ciuil, musician*.<br />
..riu,'* s./. Small flock.<br />
aois-dana.** .v. pi. Bards, poets.<br />
*<br />
*.m. Lime .<br />
kiln.<br />
f ami nt poetry. 3 Genealogists. 4<br />
;.* -eich, t.m. Gazing-stock. 2 see Soothsayers. '1'he aoin-ddna W.TU in high<br />
ch.<br />
esteem throughout tne Highlands. So late as<br />
,n-h.** ee oileanaeh.<br />
the en 1 of the 1,'th. emury tney sat in the<br />
in. -inn, *.f. see fa ileann.<br />
sreath or circle among the uob.es and chiefs<br />
ii,** a. Fine, excell m, ci, arming.<br />
of families. They took the preference of the<br />
utty.<br />
ollamh or doctor m medicine. After tl;e ex.<br />
uuiful, c-harming. Oigh tine-Lion of the Druids, they wer brought in<br />
.inn a., a