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						Cas a’ Mhogain Riabhaich
					
				
 
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					Notes: a Glencoe or Kintyre witch.
					
						Origin: Skye 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						Kintyre Proverbs
					
				
 
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						Origin: [North Uist?] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						[catrach]
					
				
 
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					catrach math gaoithe – strong wind (Arran, Bute, Cowal, Kintyre).
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						[note]
					
				
 
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					“I feel that I should explain first of all that though I am in Kintyre to earn my living, I am actually a native of Uig, Lewis, so that all these words and phrases – relevant and otherwise – which I have enclosed are ‘Uig-flavoured’.”
					
						Origin: Lewis, Uig 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						aorunn
					
				
 
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					a plain by the sea. (Kintyre)
					
						Location: Skye 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						a’ sgogadh
					
				
 
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					e.g. Tha am biadh a sgogadh air. He can’t eat any more or he has stuffed himself. He is ‘stawed’. (Kintyre)
					
						Origin: Lewis, Uig 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						crèisgin (m)
					
				
 
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					a cabin, a bothy (Kintyre).
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						eachan
					
				
 
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					a big bi-valve, found under the sand. It has a small teat which protrudes from the shell. It is called ‘ainean’ in Tighnabruaich and ‘aineachan’ in Kintyre.
					
						Origin: Lewis, Uig 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						eachtrainn
					
				
 
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					old tales, history (Kintyre).
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						gara (adj)
					
				
 
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					very; gara fuar, gara fliuch (Kintyre, also Lewis); actually just garbh = rough. Usage taken over into Eng. in Kintyre as “wild and cold” = very cold, “wild and wet” = very wet, but spreading to things, where its primary meaning was hardly suitable.
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						gille giobanach
					
				
 
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					daddy-long-legs (Kintyre).
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						moine bhan
					
				
 
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					usually soft, light and not so good. (The word used in Kintyre to describe this kind of peat is ‘phozy’.)
					
						Location: Cinntire, An Ceann a Deas [Kintyre, Southend by Campbeltown] 
						Category: Mòine / Peat-Working
					
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						richeanach
					
				
 
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					ragnails, ragged skin at base of finger-nails (N.E.); rifeineach (Uist); righinneach (Arran, Kintyre, etc.). Slender “ch” commonly reduced to gh.
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						rùdhadh
					
				
 
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					setting the peats up on end in groups of five or six, with one peat flat over the top of the others, like a ‘crom-lech’ to ward off the rain, a kind of cap. Each group is a ‘rùdhan’. This is called ‘fittin’’ the peats in Kintyre. A lady from Shetland visiting recently used this term fittin’ – probably from ‘footing’.
					
						Location: Cinntire, An Ceann a Deas [Kintyre, Southend by Campbeltown] 
						Category: Mòine / Peat-Working
					
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						sean-eachtrainn
					
				
 
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					history, old tales (Kintyre).
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous
					
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						truisleach
					
				
 
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					rubbish (Kintyre); truillis (Lewis); troileis (Moidart).
					
						Origin: [Strathglass] 
						Category: Measgaichte / Miscellaneous