Warning: Undefined variable $resultados in /home/enciclo/public_html/dictious.com/search.php on line 17
ghabh - Dictious

10 Results found for " ghabh"

ghabh

(Aran) IPA(key): /ɣoː/ <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> analytic past indicative of gabh ^ Finck, F. N. (1899) Die araner mundart [The Aran Dialect] (in German), Zweiter Band: Wörterbuch...


ath-ghabh

ath- +‎ gabh ath-<span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> (past dh&#039;ath-<span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span>, future ath-ghabhaidh, verbal noun ath-ghabhail, past participle ath-ghabhte) retake ath-<span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> a-steach...


ath-ghabh a-steach

ath-<span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> a-steach readmit...


ghaibh

IPA(key): /ɣavʲ/ ghaibh Munster form of <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span>...


an ear

Myth, page 149: <span class="searchmatch">Ghabh</span> am fear a bu shine an rathad a bha dol an ear, &#039;s <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> am fear miadhonach an rathad a bha dol an iar, agus <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> am fear òg an rathad...


gabh gaol air

gabh gaol air fall in love with <span class="searchmatch">Ghabh</span> i gaol air Raibeart. ― She fell in love with Robert....


an iar

Myth, page 149: <span class="searchmatch">Ghabh</span> am fear a bu shine an rathad a bha dol an ear, &#039;s <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> am fear miadhonach an rathad a bha dol an iar, agus <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> am fear òg an rathad...


leòr

(“enough, sufficient”). leòr f (indeclinable) sufficiency, fill, adequateness <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> mi mo leòr dhen bhiadh ― I&#039;ve had my fill of the food Used with a possessive...


faoinar

cat ― the table under which her cat sat about which/whom an tír faoinar <span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span> sé amhrán ― the country about which he sang a song Especially in the spoken...


gaber

from Proto-Germanic *gabbōną (“to mock, jest”), from Proto-Indo-European *<span class="searchmatch">ghabh</span>- (“to be split, be forked, gape”). Cognate with Old English gabban (“to...