[Spellyans] cledh etc
njawilliams
njawilliams at gmail.com
Sat Jan 12 09:15:39 GMT 2013
The short answer: NO. There are no attested examples of <eu> in any of these etyma anywhere in traditional Cornish. The <eu> spellings are from KK.
Sent from my iPhone
On 2013 Gen 11, at 22:45, Janice Lobb <janicelobb at gmail.com> wrote:
> Dick has clêdh for a ditch, dyke, trench, cutting, drain and meangledh for quarry
>
> whereas SWF has mengleudh for quarry
>
> and dowrgleudh for canal
>
> Dick has ancledhi for to bury, to inter,
>
> cledhez for buried, “ditched”
>
> ancladhvah for burial place, cemetery
>
> ancledhiaz for interment
>
> while SWF has ynkleudhyas for to bury
>
> ynkladhva for cemetery, graveyard
>
> ynkleudhyans for burial, funeral
>
> I prefer the look of Dick’s,
>
> but Q1 is the –eu- vowel justified in SWF?
>
> and Q2 is there any connection with sword cledha/kledha?
>
> _______________________________________________
> Spellyans mailing list
> Spellyans at kernowek.net
> http://kernowek.net/mailman/listinfo/spellyans_kernowek.net
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://kernowek.net/pipermail/spellyans_kernowek.net/attachments/20130112/aec0ea07/attachment.htm>
More information about the Spellyans
mailing list