<span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> nail (as a fastener) From Old Irish cid, from Proto-Celtic *kʷid, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷid. Compare with Latin quid and Irish cad. <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> what...
From Latin clavus. IPA(key): /ˈt͡ʃoːd/ <span class="searchmatch">ciôd</span> m (plural ciûd) nail (metal spike)...
<span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> (“what”) + thuige (“towards”). Cognate with Irish cad chuige. IPA(key): /ˈɡ̥ɯt̪ɯɡ̥ʲə/ <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> thuige (followed by an indirect relative clause) (dated)...
From <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> è (older caidhe, caide, goidé) from Old Irish cote (“what is the nature of?, of what kind is?”), synchronically analyzable as <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> + e, compare...
thuigesan) third-person singular masculine of gu: to him, toward him thuige seo <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> thuige ^ Oftedal, M. (1956) A linguistic survey of the Gaelic dialects of...
cravu, giau Padanian: Emilian: ciold, <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> Friulian: claud Ligurian: ciöo Old Lombard: chiouo Lombard: <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> Piedmontese: ciòv, ciò Venetan: ciodo, clold...
Clipping of <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> è (older caidhe, caide, goidé) from Old Irish cote (“what is the nature of?, of what kind is?”), synchronically analyzable as <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> + e, compare...
Hell, Etc. (Osnaichean Bho Ifrinn, Etc.)[1], page 25: "Dh'fhòghlum mi anns <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> sam bith staid am beil mi, leis a sin a bhi toilichte." "I learned that in...
thus that I speak (subj.)? Irish: goidé, cad é, cad Scottish Gaelic: <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> e, dè, <span class="searchmatch">ciod</span> Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in Old Irish...