- the
Ogham alphabet,
meaning "birch". In Old Irish, the
letter name was
Beithe,
which is
related to
Welsh bedw(en),
Breton bezv(enn), and
Latin betula...
-
Glenbeigh or
Glanbehy (Irish:
Gleann Beithe) is a
village and
civil parish on the
Iveragh peninsula in
County Kerry, Ireland. The
parish includes Rossbeigh...
- Féne,
after himself, Íarmberla,
after Íar mac Nema, and others, and the
Beithe-luis-nuin (the ogham) as a
perfected writing system for his languages. The...
-
later to ifín
necessitated the
invention of
peithe [p] also
called beithe bog "soft
beithe",
hence "brother of birch". This is
informed conjecture, however...
- be
found in the Book of Ballymote. The
first letter of
Ogham is beith;
beithe means "birch".
Buddhist m****cripts
written in the Gāndhārī
language are...
-
Ballybay (Irish: Béal Átha
Beithe,
meaning 'mouth of the ford of the birch') is a town and
civil parish in
County Monaghan, Ireland. The town is centred...
-
expressed as a
modification of [b],
called peithe,
after beithe, also
called beithe bog "soft
beithe" or, tautologically,
peithbog (ᚚ Peith,
Unicode allocation...
- "Celtic Tree Alphabet",
ascribing names of
trees to
individual letters.
Beithe in Old
Irish means Birch-tree (cognate to
Latin betula).
There is reason...
-
Polbeth (/ˌpoʊlˈbɛθ/; G. Poll - pool
beithe -
birch tree "birch pool") is a
former oil
shale mining village located about a mile from West Calder, and...
-
vocative particle, á.
Thurneysen suggests that Ailm,
Beithe was
influenced by Alpha, Beta. However,
beithe is an
Irish word, and
there is no
reason to consider...