XPost: alt.usage.english, soc.cuture.irish
On 6/3/2024 10:55 PM, Ruud Harmsen wrote:
Tue, 4 Jun 2024 10:55:20 +1000: Peter Moylan
<[email protected]d> scribeva:
On 04/06/24 10:02, Ross Clark wrote:
In December 2o00, a good friend died and willed Cassidy a number of
Irish books. The only one he didn't donate was a frayed pocket Irish
dictionary, "Focloir Poca"; it was too tattered.
"I told my wife, 'I'm going to throw this out. I'm too old to learn
to learn Irish,' " he says, "and she was like, 'Danny, no, you can't
do that. It's sacred.' So I said, 'You're right, and it might be bad
luck.'" He began reading a few words every night from the dictionary,
and some of them sounded eerily familiar.
In my own study of Irish I'm occasionally struck by a familiar-sounding
word. One of the first Irish words I learnt was cailín=girl, which
sounds just like English colleen.
Colleen was borrowed from the Irish:
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/colleen
Another that sticks in my mind is
ubh=egg, which is very close in pronunciation to French oeuf.
Remotely cognate: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/h%E2%82%82%C5%8Dwy%C3%B3m
"Focloir" always sounds to me as if it should mean "folklore", but of
course it doesn't.
Coincidence:
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/foclóir https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/foclóir
cailín=girl, ---- is there a word [Cail] which means "Woman" ?
speaking of False-Friends... in Hiberno-English, Jap means....
_______________________________
is the word [Jackeen] common today?
J.W.Joyce's book defines it as:
a nickname for a conceited Dublin citizen of the lower class.
Jackeen is a word used in Ireland, but it's important to be aware that
it's a derogatory term. Here's the breakdown:
Meaning: It refers to someone from Dublin, Ireland, typically in a
negative way.
Origin: The exact origin isn't certain, but it's believed to be
related to the name Jack (common nickname for James or John) or the
Union Jack (British flag).
Negative Connotations: It can imply someone from Dublin is arrogant, self-important, or even worthless. It can also carry historical baggage
related to tensions between Dublin and other parts of Ireland.
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