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Cnoc and meaning
* Knocknashane ( formerly Knocknashangan, from Cnoc na Seangán meaning " hill of the ants ")
Knock (, meaning The Hill – but now more generally known in Irish as Cnoc Mhuire, " Hill of ( the Virgin ) Mary ") is a village in County Mayo, Ireland.
The Placenames Database of Ireland gives the Irish name as Cnoc na Riabh ( meaning " hill of the stripes ").

Cnoc and Hill
Additionally, the water used for production, from Cnoc nan Speireag ( Hawk Hill ), flows over peat which adds additional peatiness to the whisky.
* Galway City West ( 5 seats ), consisting of the electoral divisions of Bearna, Claddagh, Cnoc na Cathrach, Rockbarton, Salthill, Taylors Hill.
The boar is believed to have had its lair in the vicinity of Knockane or “ Cnoc na Chollag ” ( Hill of the Boar ) and the animal is believed to have laid waste to the area between Knockane and Killamucky or “ Choill na Mhuice ” ( the Wood of the Pig ).
* Knock, Cnoc Con (' Hill of the hound '),
* Mount Gabriel, Cnoc Fhosta (' Hill of the encampment '),
A prominent hill called Cnoc Samhna " Hill of Samhain " also known as Ard na Ríoghraidhe " Height of the Kingfolk " south of Bruree, County Limerick is associated with a tale connected to Mongfind.
To mark this infamous act the name of the village was changed toCnoc na Crocaire ,’ the Hill of the Hangings, now anglicised as ‘ Knockcroghery ’..

Cnoc and ')
The low hill on the other side of the bay is the imaginatively named Cnoc Mòr (' big lump ')

Cnoc and name
The Irish name Cnoc Daod has been anglicised as Knockdhead and Knockday.

Cnoc and from
About seven miles from Áine ’ s hill, Cnoc Áine ( Knockainy ) in County Limerick, is the hill of the goddess Grian, Cnoc Gréine.
* Knockmenagh ( from Cnoc Meánach )
The mountain is most often climbed from the north-east, along the Hag's Glen and up the steep Devil's Ladder to the col between Carrauntoohil and Cnoc na Péiste, and then north-west to the summit.
Cnoc an Fhreiceadain is modest in height at 1008 feet, but offers dramatic Old Red Sandstone conglomorate cliffs, and impressive views along the north coast of Scotland, from Durness to Orkney.
** Cnoc Coinnich, 761m ( Joint Biggest Graham in Scotland, 1m away from a Corbett )
Knock, from the Gaelic, An Cnoc ( a small hill ), is a village in Point peninsula on the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.
* Knockerasser ( from Cnoc ar Easair )

Cnoc and is
She is also associated with sites such as Toberanna (), County Tyrone ; Dunany (), County Louth ; Lissan (), County Londonderry ; and Cnoc Áine near Teelin, County Donegal.
She is said to be buried at the summit of Cnoc Meadha, six miles south-west of Tuam, County Galway ( Lynch, 2006 ).
It is likely that his reign ended as a result of his defeat at the hands of the Picts of Fortriu, led by Talorgan mac Fergusa, brother of Óengus, at " Cnoc Cairpri in Calathros at Etarlinde ".
According to legend, Medb is buried in a high stone cairn on the summit of Knocknarea ( Cnoc na Ré in Irish ) in County Sligo.
In Strathnairn, Scotland there is a hill, known as Brin Mains, but which is known in Scottish Gaelic as " Cnoc nan Cnàimhseag " which means " The hill of the Bearberries ".
She is placed in the alternate version encamped at Cnoc Samhna ( Knocksouna ) i. e. Ard na Ríoghraidhe, which may have been the inauguration site of the Uí Fidgenti.
This monument is reached via the wooded Glen Lednock ( Scots Gaelic: Gleann Leathad Cnoc ) in which are to be found the Falls of Lednock or De ' ils Cauldron.
Mount Florida ( Gaelic: Cnoc Florida ) is an area in the southeastern corner of the Scottish city of Glasgow.
Haghill ( Gaelic: Cnoc na Caillich ) is a district in the Scottish city of Glasgow.
Govanhill ( Gaelic: Cnoc a ' Ghobhainn ) is a district in the Scottish city of Glasgow.
Priesthill ( Gaelic: Cnoc an t-Sagairt ) is a district south of the River Clyde in the Scottish city of Glasgow.

Cnoc and up
* It was featured in a Top Gear episode where Jeremy Clarkson drives a Land Rover Discovery up Cnoc an Fhreiceadain.

Cnoc and on
In another widely publicised case, on 5 March 2008 a jury found Brian Kearney guilty of the murder of his wife, Siobhán Kearney, at their home in Cnoc na Sí, Goatstown in February 2006.

Cnoc and hill
On the top of Knockfarrel ( Gaelic: Cnoc Fhearghalaigh ), a hill about three miles ( 5 km ) to the west, stands a large and very complete vitrified fort with ramparts.
Joyce preferred the interpretation Cnoc na Riaghadh (" hill of the executions ").
Cnoc na Riogha (" hill of the kings ") has also been suggested, as has " hill of the moon ".

Cnoc and .
Jeremy Clarkson of the BBC's Top Gear motoring show drove one to the top of Cnoc an Fhreiceadain, a mountain near Tongue in northern Scotland, where no vehicle had previously reached.
There are three main peaks, the Beinn Rodagraich range ( 99m ) in the south, the Beinn a ' Chàrnain range in the east ( 115m ) which incorporates Cnoc Mòr and Beinn an t-Sagairt, and the third in Ronaigh Beag, which rises to 74m.
The settlement consists of the following townlands: Cnocán an Bhodaigh, an Straidhp, an tSaoirsin, Baile na hAbhann, na Poillíní, Doire Uachtair, Aill an Phréacháin, an Coisméig Mór, na Forbacha Garbha, Seanadh Fhréachóg, and Cnoc na Gréine.
The steeply sloping Cnoc na Bhain burial ground, one of Scotland's most beautiful graveyards, contains a memorial and grave of the pioneer aviator, Captain Bertram Dickson.

meaning and Hill
Its original name was Malmhaug ( with alternate spellings ), meaning " Gravel pile " or " Ore Hill ".
The Caelian Hill was also called Querquetulanus, from " quercus "" ( oak ), nd " Fagutal " ( pointing to beech-woods, from " fagus " meaning " beech ").
# The seventh is Kampala Hill, ( also known as Old Kampala ), meaning " the hill of the impala " and whence Kampala got its name, is where the ruins of Lugard's Fort were.
The title has a very vague meaning in Russian, is not grammatically correct and can be roughly translated as " The Muttering-Not-That-Bad Show ", but sounds similar to Russian translation of the famous " The Benny Hill Show " ( in Russian — " Шоу Бенни Хилла ", " Shou Benni Hilla ") with a negation added to every part of the name.
The name derives from the Anglo-Saxon Willesdune, meaning The Hill of the Spring ,< ref name =" autogenerated1 ">
Administratively, White Rock is a neighborhood of Los Alamos ; locals refer to Los Alamos ( meaning not White Rock ) as " the Townsite ," or " the Hill ".
# " God's Hill ", from the old British word " Duw ", meaning God ( cf Latin " Deus "), and " burg ", meaning a hill or " Tiu's Hill ", derived from the Germanic god Tiu from the same Indo-European origin.
Traditionally, the playing of Dollis Hill starts a " Dollis Hill Loop ", meaning that every subsequent move made by any player must be to Dollis Hill.
* Numa's Salii Palatini were dedicated to Mars surnamed Gradivus ( meaning " he who walks into battle "), and were quartered on the Palatine Hill.
The character Piggy states that the new name consisted of three parts ; " Cam " taken from the original name of Cambridgetown, " ber " which means ' river ', because there are many rivers in the area, and " ley " because it is a common ending for English town names in the area ( as in neighbouring Frimley ); although the name was actually derived from the " Cam " stream which runs through the town ( mainly underground ), " Amber " Hill which was marked on John Norden's map of the area in 1607 and " ley " usually meaning a clearing in the woodland.
From * pen meaning ' head ' or ' hill ' and ghent, possibly equivalent to Welsh caint or to Welsh gwynt, thus either ' Hill on the Border ' or ' Hill of The Winds '
The area around the mouth of Brown Hill Creek, where the suburb of Mitcham now exists, was known to the Kaurna people of the Adelaide Plains as Wirraparinga, meaning " creek and scrub place ".
One theory is that it derives from the Anglo-Saxon words ' here ' and ' hlaw ', meaning " army hill ", probably to be identified with Mulberry Hill, which was used as the moot or meeting place for the district.
Until 1918 the area was called Sachsenberg ( local dialect: Sasko Kympa ) meaning Saxon Hill and was a small western suburb of the town of Teschen ( Polish: Cieszyn, Czech: Těšín ) in the Duchy of Teschen, within Cieszyn Silesia of Austria-Hungary.
To be accurate about the geography, the battle should properly be known as the " Battle of Kocaçimentepe " which was the correct Turkish name for the ridge and its highest peak ( meaning " Great Grass Hill ").
The peak was known to the British as " Hill 971 " and they mistakenly applied the name for a lesser ridge to the main range ( Sarı Bayır, meaning " Yellow Slope ", which ended at the imposing bluff above Anzac Cove known as " The Sphinx ").

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