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Achduart and Gaelic
The name of Achduart comes from the Gaelic for " the field at the black headland ".

Achduart and Coigach
Achduart was part of the Estate of Coigach, Lochbroom, belonging to the Countess of Cromartie.

Achduart and .
Achduart has accommodation facilities for tourists, who come for its proximity to the ocean as well as its seclusion and remoteness.

Gaelic and Achadh
* Gaelic Games-St. Mary's GAC & CC / Clooney Gaels, Ahoghill ( CLG Naomh Mhuire / Gaeil Chluana, Achadh Eochaille ) Ahoghill GAA is a thriving rural GAA club based in Crosskeys Rd, Ahoghill-outside the village in the townland of Aughterclooney.
Auchenshuggle ( Achadh an t-Seagail-" the rye field "-in Gaelic ) is an area of the city of Glasgow in Scotland.
Achnashellach ( Gaelic: Achadh nan Seileach ) is an area in Wester Ross in the Highlands of Scotland, and within the Highland council area.
Achanalt ( Gaelic: Achadh nan Allt ) is a railway halt in Strath Bran, Ross and Cromarty, in the Scottish council area of Highland.
Achmelvich ( Gaelic: Achadh Mhealbhaich ) is a settlement situated in the Highland region of Scotland.
The name comes from the Gaelic " Achadh "-a plain or meadow and " mealvaich "-sandy dunes.
Achnasheen ( Gaelic Achadh na Sìne ) is a small village in Ross-shire in the Highland council area of Scotland.
Achtoty ( Scottish Gaelic: Achadh Toitidh ) is a remote hamlet in the Scottish Highland Council area.

Gaelic and is
In between lies Strathmore, a derivation of the Gaelic for the Great Valley, which is a fertile agricultural area noted for the growing of potatoes, soft fruit and the raising of Angus cattle.
Alexandria ( Cathair Alastair in Gaelic ) is a town in West Dunbartonshire, Scotland.
Part of the Gaelic lexicon, this spelling suggests a Germanic ( Saxon ) origin, as the ' w ' is most likely pronounced as a ' v '.
In Irish it is Bealtaine (), in Scottish Gaelic Bealltainn () and in Manx Gaelic Boaltinn or Boaldyn.
The practice of bedecking the May Bush / Dos Bhealtaine with flowers, ribbons, garlands and coloured egg shells is found among the Gaelic diaspora, most notably in Newfoundland, and in some Easter traditions on the East Coast of the United States.
The lighting of a community Beltane fire from which each hearth fire is then relit is observed today in some parts of the Gaelic diaspora, though in most of these cases it is a cultural revival rather than an unbroken survival of the ancient tradition.
Although the holiday may use features of the Gaelic Beltane, such as the bonfire, it is more alike the Germanic May Day festival, both in its significance ( focusing on fertility ) and its rituals ( such as maypole dancing ).
In Irish Gaelic, the month of May is known as Mí Bhealtaine or Bealtaine, and the festival as Lá Bealtaine (' day of Bealtaine ' or, ' May Day ').
In Scottish Gaelic, the month is known as either ( An ) Cèitean or a ' Mhàigh, and the festival is known as Latha Bealltainn or simply Bealltainn.
Beltane was formerly spelt Bealtuinn in Scottish Gaelic ; in Manx it is spelt Boaltinn or Boaldyn.
In modern Scottish Gaelic, Latha Buidhe Bealltainn or Là Buidhe Bealltainn (' the yellow day of Bealltain ') is used to describe the first day of May.
Cape Breton Island (-formerly Île Royale, Scottish Gaelic: Ceap Breatainn or Eilean Cheap Bhreatainn, Míkmaq: Únamakika, simply: Cape Breton ) is an island on the Atlantic coast of North America.
To this day Gaelic is still the first language of a number of elderly Cape Bretoners.
English is now the primary spoken language, though Mi ' kmaq, Gaelic and French are still heard.
The scenery of the island is rivalled in northeastern North America only by Newfoundland and Cape Breton Island tourism marketing places a heavy emphasis on its Scottish Gaelic heritage through events such as the Celtic Colours Festival, held each October, as well as promotions through the Gaelic College of Celtic Arts and Crafts.
The Scottish Gaelic form is and has the additional meanings of " pulpit " and " churn ".
The situation of the Gaelic kingdoms of Dál Riata in western Scotland is uncertain.
As a result, significant portions of the three provinces are influenced by Celtic heritages, with Scottish Gaelic having been widely spoken, particularly in Cape Breton, although it is less prevalent today.
An alternative derivation is from the Gaelic Domhnain which merely means " land " and leads to the meaning " people of the land ", Latinised as Dumnonii.

Gaelic and small
Kinglassie ( Gaelic: Cille MoGhlasaidh ) is a small village in central Fife, Scotland.
Although there is no strict size definition, a small loch is often known as a lochan ( so spelled also in Scottish Gaelic ; in Irish it is spelled lochán ).
The Small Isles ( Scottish Gaelic: Na h-Eileanan Tarsainn ) are a small archipelago of islands in the Inner Hebrides, off the west coast of Scotland.
Back of Keppoch ( Gaelic: Cùl na Ceapaich ) is a small coastal settlement in the north west Scottish Highlands, approximately 40 miles west of Fort William near to the A830 road to Mallaig.
They did gain power in Western Scotland, originated new small kingdoms, and reinforced the idea of a common origin and that Scotland was somehow populated ( or re-populated ) by Gaelic Irish.
* Birthplace of Republican political activist Bernadette Devlin, who was raised in a small housing estate called Rathbeg ( meaning small fort in Gaelic ), one of the leaders of 1960s civil rights movement and the youngest woman ever to be elected to the British parliament ( aged 21 ).
Ecclefechan ( Eaglais Fheichein in Gaelic ) is a small village in the south of Scotland in Dumfries and Galloway.
To the north-west of Strathclyde lay the Gaelic kingdom of Dál Riata, and to the north-east a small number of Pictish kingdoms.
The list below refers to all-Ireland ( or nominally all-Ireland ) states and to the post-partition states, not the patchwork of small Gaelic kingdoms.
Historians refer to a Gaelic revival or resurgence as ocurring between 1350 and 1500, by which time the area ruled for the Crown — " the Pale " — had shrunk to a small area around Dublin.
The Gaelic Irish resisted this conquest through military and other means, but were organised in small independent lordships and did not have a common political goal such as a centralised independent Irish state.
While Yeats and his followers wrote about an essentially aristocratic Gaelic Ireland, the reality was that the actual Ireland of the 1930s and 1940s was a society of small farmers and shopkeepers.
They began by drilling a small number of IRB associated with the Dublin Gaelic Athletic Association, led by Harry Boland.
Oronsay ( Scottish Gaelic: Orasaigh, ), also sometimes spelt and pronounced Oransay by the local community, is a small tidal island south of Colonsay in the Scottish Inner Hebrides with an area of just over two square miles.
For historical reasons, including the influence of a Scots-speaking royal court in Edinburgh, and the plantation of merchant burghs in much of the south and east, the Gàidhealtachd has been reduced massively to the present region of the Western Isles, and the North-West Highlands, Skye and Lochalsh and Argyll and Bute, with small Gaelic populations existing in Glasgow and Edinburgh.
Bellabeg ( an anglicisation of Scottish Gaelic: Am Baile Beag, ' the small farmtown ') is a small roadside settlement in Strathdon, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
The Garvellachs ( Scottish Gaelic: Garbh Eileaich ) or Isles of the Sea form a small archipelago in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland.
The Highland midge ( scientific name: Culicoides impunctatus ) ( Scots: Midgie ) ( Gaelic: Meanbh-chuileag ) is a species of small flying insect, found in upland and lowland areas ( fens, bogs and marshes ) especially in the north west of Scotland from late spring to late summer.
From 1975, Clackmannan ( from the Gaelic Clach Mhanainn, ' Stone of Manau ') was the name of a small town and local government district in the Central region of Scotland, corresponding to the traditional county of Clackmannanshire, which was Scotland's smallest.
Ralston ( Baile Raghnaill in Scottish Gaelic ) is a small, suburban settlement in Renfrewshire, Scotland, bordering onto the eastern edge of the town of Paisley.
There are several small islands in Loch Katrine such as Ellen's Isle ( Gaelic: An t-Eilean Molach " the shingly isle "), the Black Isle and Factor's Island ( Gaelic: Eilean a ' Bhàillidh ).

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