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Cargando... Celtic Baby Names: Traditional Names from Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Brittany, Cornwall & the Isle of Manpor Judy Sierra
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This book is not just for parents! Adults seeking newer and better names for themselves and writers looking for meaningful and melodious names for literary characters will also find wondrous treasures in this book, a guide to over 1200 traditional first names from the six Celtic languages: Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Breton, Welsh, Cornish and Manx.Many Celtin names are tantalizingly close to English ones, but with appealing twists, such as the Cornish Wyllow and Meryn, BVreton Gaelie and Derrien, Irish Nessa and Cliona, and Welsh Bryn and Meriel. Some Celtin names can be traced back two thousand years to a time when everyone understood their meanings. The Welsh Teyrnon meant 'divine prince', the Breton Gwencalon signified 'shining heart; and the Irish Riordan was a 'royal poet'. The names of ancient Celtic queens and kings, heroes and heroines, saints and scholars have survived to the present day. The old Irish royal name Conchobar is now Conor, while the queenly Eithne evolved into Enya. Dylan, a name which means 'ocean' in Middle Welsh, was a mysterious sea-child in a medieval tale, but the name was seldom bestowed upon babies until 1914, when schoolmaster Gwilym Thomas gave it to his newborn son, a boy who grow up to have the Celtic gift of poetry. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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