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Cormac's Glossary ( also 9th century ), and a gloss in the later manuscript H. 3. 18, both explain the plural word gudemain (" spectres ") with the plural form morrígna.
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Cormac's and Glossary
" The ninth century Sanas Cormaic ( or " Cormac's Glossary ") says the "... Druids used to make fires with great incantations ," and were lit to safeguard against diseases.
Descriptions of the practices associated with Imbas forosnai are found in Cormac's Glossary and in the mythology associated with Finn MacCumhail.
Sanas Cormaic ( or Sanas Chormaic, Irish for " Cormac's narrative "), also known as Cormac's Glossary, is an early Irish glossary containing etymologies and explanations of over 1, 400 Irish words, many of which are difficult or outdated.
Its Irish cognate may be " Triath, king of the Swine " ( Old ) or the Torc Triath mentioned in the Lebor Gabála, also recorded as Old Irish Orc tréith " Triath's boar " in Cormac's Irish Glossary.
Cormac's and also
Here, he appeared at Cormac's ramparts in the guise of a warrior who told him he came from a land where old age, sickness, death, decay, and falsehood were unknown ( the Otherworld was also known as the " Land of Youth " or the " Land of the Living ").
The cries of Badb may also be an ill omen: Cormac's impending death is foreshadowed with the words " The red-mouthed badbs will cry around the house, / For bodies they will be solicitous " and " Pale badbs shall shriek ".
There is also a tract in TCD MS 1336 ( olim MS H 3. 17 ), col. 723 which claims that the spear survived into the reign of Cormac mac Airt, and came to be known as the Crimall of Birnbuadach causing Cormac's blinding and rendering him unfit for kingship.
Cormac's and .
The hero Fionn mac Cumhaill is supposed to have lived in Cormac's time, and most of the stories of the Fenian Cycle are set during his reign.
When Lugaid heard this, he conceded that Cormac's judgement was superior to his and abdicated the throne.
Lugaid revealed that it had been he who had killed Cormac's father in the Battle of Maigh Mucruimhe, and Cormac demanded, as éraic for Art's life, that Lugaid give him Fergus ' head.
Lugaid took the head of Fergus ' brother, Fergus Foltlebair, and brought it to Cormac's attendant, who told him this was not the head of the king of Ulster.
But Fiacha in desperation turned to the powerful Munster druid Mug Ruith for aid, and his magic was too strong even for Cormac's fairy druids.
The 8th-century text The Expulsion of the Déisi describes enmity between Cormac and the group known as the Déisi, descendants of Cormac's great grandfather Fedlimid Rechtmar who had been his retainers.
Óengus runs Cellach through with his " dread spear ", which has three chains attached to it ; these chains wound one of Cormac's advisers and blind Cormac in one eye.
She appears in a similar guise in Togail Bruidne Dá Choca to foretell the slaying of Cormac Condloinges, as well as taking the form of a " washer at the ford "— a woman washing Cormac's chariot and harness in a ford in what was considered an omen of death.
The most prominent earthworks within are the two linked enclosures, a bivallate ring fort and a bivallete ring barrow known as Teach Chormaic ( Cormac's House ) and the Forradh or Royal Seat.
Most common was the Romanesque style, as seen at Cormac's Chapel on the Rock of Cashel, and at Clonfert Cathedral in Galway.
A protracted battle then takes place in the forest ; Cormac's crew kills Pelter's crew, the Golems Cento and Aiden take out Mr. Crane, and Cormac drills a hole through Pelter's head with his thin-gun.
Cormac's and ("
The 9th-century Irish dictionary Sanas Cormaic (" Cormac's glossary ") describes Iarnnbélrae as a recently extinct language which was " dense and difficult ", and records two words which derived from it: ond
Cormac's and with
According to some traditions Ness is the mother of Cormac Cond Longas by incest with Conchobar ( although in other traditions, Cormac's mother is Conchobar's wife Clothru ).
Glossary and also
Authors other than Derrida have also used the term " deconstructionism " with different definitions .< ref >" Glossary Definition: Deconstructionism.
Precisely because some members of the government also held such views, the PNDC secretary for finance and economic planning, Kwesi Botchwey, felt the need to justify World Bank ( see Glossary ) assistance to Ghana in 1983:
* RoyalArk on non-European dynasties, here China under the Manchu ( last ) Emperors, see also Glossary, and via Home look up other nations
The Hausa, also of West Africa, classify drummers into those who beat drums and those who beat ( pluck ) strings ( the other 4 player classes are blowers, singers, acclaimers, and talkers ), as reported by Ames and King in Glossary of Hausa Music and its Social Contexts, 1971, Northwestern U. Press.
See also the Glossary of baseball for the jargon of the game itself, as used by participants, fans, reporters, announcers, and analysts of the game.
Drawing on his own fieldwork Grose also branched out into producing dictionaries, including the famous A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue ( 1785 ) and A Provincial Glossary, with a Collection of Local Proverbs, and Popular Superstitions ( 1787 ).
Similarly, although there is much overlap, you may also want to refer to the Glossary of wildfire terms for terminology particular to that type of firefighting.
In the Punjab Census Report ( 1911 ), Pandit Harikishan Kaul points out that members of the Arain tribe are “ mostly Muhammadans ,” ( in the Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North West Frontier Province, Denzil Ibbetson also refers to the Arains as, “ Almost to a man Muhammadans ”).
The early-15th-century Glossary of Beszterce, the most ancient currently known Hungarian “ dictionary ,” reveals that the ultimate ancestor of flat breads was the panis focacius attributed to the Romans ( of which derives also the Italian flat bread called focaccia ).
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