geasa
English
Etymology
Irish geasa, the plural of both geis and geas.
Noun
geasa
- plural of geis
- plural of geas
- (nonstandard) Synonym of geas or geis, mistakenly treated as a singular.
- 1994, Desmond MacNamara, The Book of Intrusions, Dalkey Archive Press, →ISBN, page 45:
- Their physical yearning for each other was nearly as great as their union of poetry, but it was inhibited by a geasa, or taboo, that had been inflicted on Curither by an elderly aesodan, his poetic mentor during the long years of ...
- 2011, David Gemmell, Sword in the Storm, Del Rey, →ISBN:
- [Y]ears ago I placed a geasa on a baby girl. It was that if she ever saw a three-legged fox, she should follow it. Last year she saw a fox that had three legs, and she followed her geasa. She found a young man sitting by a stream.
- 2019, Brendan Wolfe, Wolfe's History: A Family Story, →ISBN, page 388:
- The gallant lad did that, too, and triumphed, but, as the Black Goat was passing out, he put upon the boy a geasa to tie up the Jester of the Prince of Darkness. That also the youth did, only to have another geasa put upon him.
Irish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɟasˠə/
Noun
geasa f
- nominative/vocative/dative plural of geis
Mutation
| radical | lenition | eclipsis |
|---|---|---|
| geasa | gheasa | ngeasa |
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
Northern Sami
Pronoun
geasa
Scottish Gaelic
Noun
geasa f
- genitive singular of geas