Re: Clockwise without clocks
From: | Ray Brown <ray.brown@...> |
Date: | Friday, April 1, 2005, 6:52 |
On Thursday, March 31, 2005, at 05:03 , caeruleancentaur wrote:
[snip]
> BTW, I never heard the word "deosil," although I am acquainted with
> widdershins. "Widdershins" is of Germanic origin meaning "counter-
> course."
Yep.
> Can anyone enlighten me as to the etymology of "deosil"?
Scots _deasil_ pronounced variously as [di:zl=], [dEsl=], [deSl=] or
[di:Sl=] "sunwise movement" <-- Gaelic _deiseil_ "southward, toward(s) the
sun" <-- _deas_ "right[hand], south" + Old Irish/Gaelic _sel_ (mod.
Gaelic _seal_) "turning" <-- *swel- (cf. Welsh _chwyl_).
The words for _south_ and _right-hand_ are the same in the Insular Celtic
langs.
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On Friday, April 1, 2005, at 02:11 , B. Garcia wrote:
[snip]
> I feel that this topic has been getting increasingly more complex than
> it needs to be.
I agree - I can't help thinking we have really exhausted the topic now :
)
Ray
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Anything is possible in the fabulous Celtic twilight,
which is not so much a twilight of the gods
as of the reason." [JRRT, "English and Welsh" ]
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