It is frequently regarded as the Irish variant of the name Aidan. It derives from the old Irish term Aedan, which means “small fire.” 2. Airt Art is one of the many versions of this name, with the meaning noble, great, and kind. Another source translates it as stone or bear. Old...
[guanach] a. giddy, lighthearted [Guanag] pnf. g.d. -aig, a dog's name, meaning `little coquettish one' [gucag] nf. g.d. -aig; pl.+an, bud, bubble, globule, bell [gudaboc] nm. g.v. -buic, for budagoc, one of the several names for `snipe' [gu dé] for : ciod è...
Banbha (f) BAN uh va Banba the name of an ealy goddess, and was also used as name for Ireland Bardán (m) BAR dawn Bardan "poet; bard" Baoth (m) BEE Baeth vain; reckless; foolish Beag (m/f) B'YAG Becc little; small Beagán (m) B'YAG awn Beccán small, little lad Béb...
Gaelic Football: A CROSS TO BEAR FOR MURTAGHByline: By ORLA BANNONThe Mirror (London, England)
and suspended for three months. A week later he scored five goals for Wilton United in the FAI Youth Cup and Paul “Golden Boy” O’Donovan, the manager of Cork Celtic, called to his house. Barry-Murphy was 18, before he was JBM – the ...
the first group are much harder to learn than the second.) Scots Gaelic itself comes from the Ulster dialect of Irish, and was brought across the short leap of St George's Channel about 300ad by an Ulster tribe called in Latin the Scotti, who settled in Argyll and gave their name to ...
Read the full-text online article and more details about "Gaelic Football: Kernan: Pain of Portlaoise Loss Has Given Us a Cross to Bear; GAA: Armagh Ace in Hunt for More Silverware" - The Mirror (London, England), March 15, 2007