-
manumission was possible. The Old
Irish and
Welsh words for 'slave',
cacht and
caeth respectively, are
cognate with
Latin captus 'captive'
suggesting that the...
- (again,
regardless of stress).
Notes final or only syllable, e.g. chwarae,
caeth non-final syllable. e.g. chwaraewr,
caethwas In some
other words containing...
- "grave", kapt "expression to
indicate grabbing. OIr
cacht "female slave", W
caeth "slave, captive" < *kap-tos "taken" kap "I grasp, grab", kam "I have" *gʰabʰ-...
-
until quite recently, been
composed in
various forms of
strict metre (canu
caeth),
latterly with the
encouragement of the
eisteddfod movement. The following...
- Din Bych (Tenby);
there may have been
another at
Castell Argoel (probably
Caeth Argoel) in Dyfed,
which was
presumably named in his honor. He was a patron...
-
theories as to the meaning, but the most po****r is that it
comes from crug
caeth:
caeth may mean 'prisoner' and thus the name
could mean 'prisoner's rock', a...
- "Dim Ffiniau" – 3:53 "Ysgarlad" – 4:18 "Ble Sefa Dref" – 3:48 "Rhyddid
Caeth" – 3:48 "Croesi'r Afon" – 3:42 "Hwylio Dros Y Môr" – 4:47 A ****anese 15-track...
-
Martyn Davies Darluniau ar
Gynfas 1971
Bangor Bryan Martyn Davies Y
Golau Caeth 1972
Haverfordwest Rev
Dafydd Rowlands Dadeni 1973
Ruthin Alan
Llwyd Y Dref...
- "to get", and dod "to come" are all
irregular in
similar ways. The
forms caeth, caethon,
caethoch often appear as cafodd, cawson,
cawsoch in writing, and...
-
Occitan caitiu, OFr
chaitif (mod. chétif "wretched, feeble", cf.
Welsh caeth "bondman, slave", vs.
Italian cattivo,
Spanish cautivo). In
French and the...