- the
greatness of his
magical power", in the
Middle Irish language Coir
Anmann (The
Fitness of Names) says:
Tales depict the
Dagda as a
figure of immense...
- 'power',
hence the
literal meaning may be
literally "swift power". The Cóir
Anmann [ga]
refers to him as the "god of power", with cécht
glossed as "power"...
- M4782-4787
Geoffrey Keating,
Foras Feasa ar Éirinn 1.30
Whitley Stokes (ed. & trans.), "Cóir
Anmann",
Irische Texte series 3 vol. 2, 1897, p. 295 v t e...
-
ruled by the Mac Cárthaigh. A late
medieval text in
Middle Irish named Cóir
Anmann (known in
English as the "Fitness of Names" or the "Elucidation of Names")...
-
given rise to
Irish legends of werewolves. The
medieval Irish work Cóir
Anmann (Fitness of Names),
which was
probably based on
earlier traditions, gives...
-
Annals of the Four
Masters to 1241–1231 BC. A
medieval tract called Cóir
Anmann ("The
Fitness of Names") says that Géde
Ollgothach was
another name for...
- Bob "Bobby"
Ammann (born May 27, 1965) is a
retired Swiss-American
soccer goalkeeper.
Being a
competitive NCAA
Division I
collegiate and
professional athlete...
- Connacht-woman
unrelated to Conchobar: see
Whitley Stokes (ed. & trans.), "Cóir
Anmann",
Irische Texte series 3 vol. 2, 1897, p. 393-395 In some
stories Deichtine...
-
culled for information.
Banshenchas ("History of Women")
Dobbs 1932 Cóir
Anmann ("The
Fitness of Names"):
Stokes 1897
Dindsenchas ("Lore of Places") Sanas...
- and then enjo**** pleasure, over her. He also
tells a
story from the Cóir
Anmann ("fitness of names")
about a
certain Lugaid Loígde, one of the five sons...