-
Lurganare (from
Irish Lorga an Áir,
meaning 'tract of the slaughter') is a
small village and
townland in
County Down,
Northern Ireland, four
miles north...
-
Lorgues (French pronunciation: [lɔʁɡ]; Occitan:
Lòrgas) is a
commune in the Var
department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur
region in
Southeastern France...
- loch
lurgey [løɹɡə] leg Goidelic; from O.Ir.
lurga "shin bone"; cf. Ir.
lorga maidjey [ˈmaːʒə]
stick Goidelic; from O.Ir. maide, Ir., Sc.G.
maide meeyl...
-
military camp)
Longstone (named
after a
standing stone)
Lurgyvallen (from
Lorga Uí Mhealláin, "O'Mallon's long low ridge")
Mullynure (from
Mullach an Iúir...
- Lisselton,
Lissycasey lough loch lake Loughgall, Loughrea,
Loughshinny lurgan lorga(n) long
ridge Lurgan,
Ballynalurgan maum, maam mám
mountain p**** Maum, Maam...
-
Lurgan Park lake.
Another theory is that it
could be from the
Irish language lorga spád
meaning the
shaft (literally "shin") of a spade. The
ballad Master...
- "Walachian
voivodes 1247–1859".
Eliznik web pages.
Retrieved 11 May 2013.
Lorga, p. 65; Giurescu, p. 463; I. Bogdan, p. 266; Mályusz, p. 112 PP Panaitescu...
-
derives from "baile" (meaning townland, town or homestead) and "lorgain" or "
lorga" (long low
ridge or
strip of land). The
local national (primary) school...
- wyjdźcie z szafy! [Girls, come out of the closet!] (in Polish),
Fundacja Lorga, ISBN 978-83-923554-1-0, OCLC 654898151 Laszuk, Anna; Sosnowska,
Beata (2010)...
- p. 226-235;
Literatura teologică bizantină în preocupările lui
Nicolae lorga, în BOR, an. L****VIII, 1969, nr. 11–12, p. 1248–1256;
Biserica Ortodoxă...