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CCXXxii GI.OSSARIAL INDEX.
cesu, ccssu quamvis est Ep. 133.
cet, s. permission pref. 38 : cet cia theis fri baig : cet (gl. fiat) Tirech. 7 ; now cead O'D. Gr.
429-4:30. W. ced favour, gift.
cet, hwtdred, centum, W. cant, gen. sg. ceit, July 24 D. c^t Mar. 12, Ep. 188. ace. sg. cet-n July
4, Oc. 5, n. pi. cet, Sep. 1, Oc. 10, n. dual Oc. 30. dat. dual cetaib, Ap. 3, fo c6t cet
o hundred hundred times, Prol. 151. dat. pi. cetaib Prol. 212, 328, Mav 12, 13, Aug. 7,
Sep. 8, Oc. 9 B, Oc. 16. cet mile ' 100,000,' July 24.
cetach, adj. centenarius Z'. 307, gen. sg. in. c§taig, Nov. 10, applied to Conn e(5tchatliaoh hiaulred.
battled.
c^tain, s. first fast (jejunium), dia cetain Wednesday pref. dat. hi cetain LU. 2-")''. Here
cet Ls = Gaulish cintu. GlUck K.N. 126.
cetal, s.n. sotiff June 1, Ep. 150, cetul pref. gen. pi. Oc. 1. v. soer-chetul.
c6te, s. road, way : for chete .i. for conair Dee. 20. B. But O'Dav. 66 explains ceite by aonach
(nime) heaven's assembli/, and so in the addition to Cormac's glossary : " cete a coitu, vel
quia ibi equi cito currant." O'Clery gives the four me;inings, conair, path, aonach
assembly, faithce, a green, tulach, a hill.
cethair-fichet, twenty-four pref. B.
cethard.ae, s.n. four things pref. Z'. 313.
cethorcha, ybr^2/ ('^^ ant-stem), used alone, gen. s. cethorchat (cethrachat B) Mar. 9.
cethorchat, ybr^y (an a-stem), dat. sg. co cethorcat cresen Oc. 24, literally with a forty of
venerable ones.
cethramad,_/(MtJ'</(, Feb. 29.
cethramain, s. qtiarter, dat. pi. cethramnaib pref. B.
cethramthu, s.f. a. fourth part, Petrie, Tara, 176, dat. sg. cethrumtliain pref. pl.cethramdin Z'. 309.
cethri, ceithri, four, with aU gendere, ceithri deich Oc. 16, cethri deich Oc. 25, cetri chet Sep. 1 B.
cethi-ur, s.n. four persons Jan. 20, Z-. 313 = cethror Oc. 26.
cetne, cetna, sajne 7?. 229. Prol. 202, 244.
ch from c between vowels (loch, loche), from g, in the desinence of monosyllables, tech, di-i'iuch,
tor-mach, im-mach, ro-sc:iich, ]irolach, Prol. 144. cht for ct, secht, ocht.
chucut, unto thee Prol. 280 : compare for the infection of the first c chucut ad te Z'. 181, chucunn
ad nos, Maelisu's hymn : cue —ihe redujilicated cu-cth, whei'e cth=)iar in icara
(Windisch) and ut is the suffixed pers. prou. of the 2d sg.
cia, conj. quod, qtrnmi^is see c6.
cia, pron. interrog. Z'. 355 (W. pwy, Skr. kim, kis, Lat. quis) : cia(ernail) aiste wltat kind of
metre 1 pi'ef cia roadnocht isin lige who was buried in the grave ? ib. ciiunaith, cia ret, ib.
elall, s.f. sensus (W. pwyll, Skr. ci wahrnehmen, Beitr. viii. 39), gen. sg. ceille Z^. 242, ace. sg.
ceUl Ep. 52, n. pi. at baetha cialla ban silly are women's mimis Sgl.
cian, adj. remotUJi, longus, in erchian : see c^n supiti.
Cianan of Doimliacc (now Duleek), Nov. 24, a dimin. of cian.
Ciar, a -iTi-gin, Jan. 5, Oc. 16, Goth, skeirsi
Ciaran, Prol. 182, of Saigir, Mar. 5. Ciaran CMana (maccunois) p. 9 and Reeves Col. 23,
24, latinised Quiaranus Lib. Hymn. fo. 31°. His father was Beoan the wright, of the
Lathairn Molt, his mother Darerca, LB. 16. n. pi. Ciarain Prol. 235.
cias, qui plorat, Ep. 350, 3d. sg. rel. pres. of ciim (now written caoidhim), root KVAS, whence
also Lat. quer-or, ques-tus.
Cicilia, Sep. 1, Nov. 22 = CecUia virgin and martyr : see her legend, Jameson S. «t L. Art, 583.
cid, cur est, pref 3, quamvis est Prol. 201.
cimbid, s. a captive Ap. 26, Aug. 14, Z'. 233, gen. sg. cimmeda Br. h. 2, ace. pi. cimbidi (gl.
custodias) Lib. Arm. 189, b. 1, seems a deriv. from cim .i. cuing a yoke Gl. 183.
cin, B. a crime, ace. sg. cinaid Jan. 17, Aug. 17, n. pi. cinaid Ep. 387, ace. pi. cen chinta friusom
(gl. gratis) Ml. 19, conmill cin na cumachtach, ni aibtor bus m6, itir clainn is geiuelac h
cusa nomad n-6 O'Dav. 71.

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