-
takes the
shape of a colt, or
equate it to the
water horse known locally as
cabbyl-ushtey. Yet
another source claims the
glashtin was a water-bull (tarroo-ushtey...
- as the each-uisce (anglicized as
aughisky or ech-ushkya) in
Ireland and
cabbyl-ushtey on the Isle of Man. It
usually takes the form of a horse, and is...
-
feeackle [ˈfiːɣəl] "tooth"
Voiced plosive to
voiced fricative: /b/ > [v]:
cabbyl [ˈkaːvəl] "horse" /d̪/ > [ð]:
eddin [ˈɛðənʲ] "face" /dʲ/ > [ʒ]:
padjer [ˈpaːʒər]...
- Shetland) the
nuggle also
known as the
shoopiltee or
njogel (Shetland) the
cabbyl-ushtey (Isle of Man) the
Ceffyl Dŵr (Wales) the
capaill uisce or the glashtin...
-
parts of the
British Islands they
include the
Welsh ceffyl dŵr and the Manx
cabbyl-ushtey.
Parallels to the
general Germanic neck and the
Scandinavian bäckahäst...
- The
Douglas Bay
Horse Tramway (Manx: Raad
Yiarn Cabbyl Vaie Ghoolish) on the Isle of Man runs
along the
seafront promenades of
Douglas for approximately...
- no
liking for lazy people. However, it
should not be
confused with the
Cabbyl-ushtey, the Manx
water horse.
Bugganes were
occasionally called upon by...
- 'work horse, nag', dim. of cabō (> L) W ceffyl, Br kefel, Ir capall, Manx
cabbyl Lat
equus claie 'rack,
fence post, hurdle' Gasc
cleda 'small gate', Cat...
-
resembling a bull that
tries unsuccessfully to
procreate with cows the
cabbyl-ushtey or
water horse, the more
harmless variant of the
Scottish each-uisge...
-
Arthur William Moore reported that
there was a
sighting of the
glashtin or
Cabbyl-Ushtey, a water-horse of Manx
legend at
Ballure Glen in 1859. Moore, Arthur...