- Crécy. The word "slogan"
originally derives from sluagh-gairm or sluagh-
ghairm (sluagh = "people", "army", and
gairm = "call", "proclamation"), the Scottish...
-
earlier slogorn,
which was an
Anglicisation of the
Scottish Gaelic sluagh-
ghairm (sluagh "army", "host" +
gairm "cry"). In
other regions it is
called a war-cry...
- slogorn,
which was an
Anglicisation of the
Scottish Gaelic and
Irish sluagh-
ghairm (sluagh 'army', 'host' and
gairm 'cry').
George E. Shankel's (1941, as cited...
- (heraldry)). The word 'slogan' is an
Anglicisation of the
Scottish Gaelic sluagh-
ghairm (sluagh "army, host" +
gairm "cry").
There are
several notable slogans which...
- town of Tilburg, also
known as PWOG, Thee
Disciples ov Gaia and
Sluagh Ghairm. Two of the
members were
affiliated with Thee
Temple ov
Psychick Youth....
- Webster's Dictionary, a
slogan derives from the
Scottish Gaelic "sluagh-
ghairm", a
battle cry. Its
contemporary definition denotes a
distinctive advertising...
- Century.
Shindig From sìnteag to skip, or jump
around Slogan From sluagh-
ghairm [ˈs̪l̪ˠuəɣɤɾʲɤm], battle-cry
Sporran Via
sporan [ˈs̪pɔɾan] from Old Irish...
- do not come from this; they come from Old English.
slogan (from sluagh-
ghairm meaning "a battle-cry used by
Gaelic clans")
Meaning of a word or phrase...
- ‘Divination’ is said to have occurred. The
correct designation is Tigh-
ghairm nan Cat; i.e. ‘The
House of
Invocation of the Cats. Clan
Chattan tartan...
-
Missing or
empty |url= (help)
Raghnall MacIlleD****bh (3
October 2003). "Bho
ghairm a'
choilich gu gath an t-seillein". The
Scotsman (in
Scottish Gaelic). The...