-
Padraig Gearr Ó
Mannin (fl. 1798) was a
United Irishman who parti****ted in the
Irish Rebellion of 1798 in
County Mayo. Ó
Mannin was a
native of Carnacregg...
- consonant. This can be seen in
ceann [cɑːn̪ˠ] "head", cam [kɑːmˠ] "crooked",
gearr [ɟɑːɾˠ] "short", ord [ouɾˠd̪ˠ] "sledgehammer", gall [gɑːl̪ˠ] "foreigner...
- The Gare Loch or
Gareloch (Scottish Gaelic: An
Gearr Loch) is an open sea loch in
Argyll and Bute,
Scotland and
bears a
similar name to the
village of...
- d’iarr mo stór orm
stadadh den ól Nó nach
mbeinn anseo ach(t) seal beag
gearr. Ach(t) dúirt mé léithe gur ársaigh sí bréag Is
gurbh fhaide do mo shaol...
-
village of
Mullach Gearr was
demolished to make room for the castle's 3,000 acre estate. The last
surviving evicted resident of
Mullach Gearr,
Freddy McHugh...
- steeply-sided
ridges that
extend north into the Glen. Two of the sisters,
Gearr Aonach ('short ridge') and
Aonach Dubh ('black ridge')
converge at Stob...
- also "to make cake", from a PIE root *g'ʰer- "cut" also
continued in
Irish gearr and
English gash,
which is
perhaps an
early loan
ultimately from the same...
-
Neilson Edward John
Newell (informer)
Arthur O'Connor
Roger O'Connor
Padraig Gearr Ó
Mannin James Orr
William Orr
Thomas Paine,
honorary member Anthony Perry...
-
Lochgair (Scottish Gaelic: An Loch
Geàrr) is a
village in
Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It lies on the
coast of Loch Gair, a
small inlet on the west of Loch...
- a
common surname in Ireland,
where it
often derives from the nickname,
gearr,
meaning "short of height". In some
cases it is
thought to come from the...