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Bibliography

Breatnach, Liam, “On Old Irish collective and abstract nouns, the meaning of cétmuinter, and marriage in early mediaeval Ireland”, Ériu 66 (2016): 1–29.

  • journal article
Citation details
Contributors
Article
“On Old Irish collective and abstract nouns, the meaning of cétmuinter, and marriage in early mediaeval Ireland”
Periodical
Ériu 66 (2016)
Breatnach, Liam, and Damian McManus (eds), Ériu 66 (2016), Royal Irish Academy.
Volume
66
Pages
1–29
Description
Abstract (cited)

This paper consists of two parts. The first concerns the use of words such as cerd to denote both an abstract concept (‘craft’) and a person who embodies it (‘craftsman’), and of words such as fine to denote both a collective (‘kin’) and an individual member of the collective (‘kinsman’). The second part consists of an examination of the meaning of cétmuinter, as well as an account of the origin and persistence of the mistranslation ‘chief wife’, which implicitly underpins the notion of polygamy in Early Christian Ireland.

Subjects and topics
Headings
Early Irish early Irish law
Approaches
lexicography
Language
Lexical itemSingle words, morphemes or phrases.
Irish cerdIrish cétmuinter
Other subjects
marriage marriage law craftspeople
Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
July 2021, last updated: December 2024