cèilidh
English
Noun
cèilidh (plural cèilidhs)
- Alternative form of ceilidh.
- 2013, Robert Dunbar, “Vernacular Gaelic Tradition”, in Sarah Dunnigan, Suzanne Gilbert, editors, The Edinburgh Companion to Scottish Traditional Literatures, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, →ISBN:
- Although cèilidhs were undoubtedly crucial for oral tradition’s transmission, aspects – particularly song – were all-pervasive and ever-present.
- 2018, Philip Dixon, Dairy Cows & Duck Races: The Life & Times of a Young Farmer, Poundbury, Dorset: Veloce Publishing, published 2019, →ISBN:
- A caller is the person who calls out the instructions to the dancers at barn dances and cèilidhs, such as, ‘now turn and face the Moor Cock wall!’
- 2021, Sam Heughan, Graham McTavish, The Clanlands Almanac: Seasonal Stories from Scotland, London: Hodder & Stoughton, →ISBN:
- I can’t remember my first cèilidh. (In fact, it is in the nature of cèilidhs NOT to remember them, simply because of the sheer amount of whisky consumed.)
Scottish Gaelic
Alternative forms
- céilidh (superseded)
Etymology
From Old Irish céilide (“visit, visiting”), from céle (“companion”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkʲʰeːli/
Noun
cèilidh f (genitive singular cèilidhe, plural cèilidhean)
- gossiping, visiting, visit
- Bha mi a' cèilidh air do mhàthair a-raoir. ― I was visiting with your mother last night.
- sojourning
- pilgrimage
- ceilidh
Descendants
Mutation
radical | lenition |
---|---|
cèilidh | chèilidh |
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Scottish Gaelic.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.