Monday, 17 February 2025

2025 Day 48

2025 Dedh Dogens hag Eth 















De Lün, seytegves mis Whevrel 
Monday, 17th February 



 

En lever bian dyllys en mil eth cans pajar ügens ha pemdhek, wòja an mernans Joseph Thomas, my ell cavas nebes geryow "dialek" whath ûsyes e'n jedh hedhyw.  

In a small book published in 1895, after the death of Joseph Thomas, I can find some "dialect" words still used nowadays. 



radnyeth 

stiryans 

Kernôwek 

Sowsnek 

crow 

A sty, e.g. Pig’s crow 

crow (m) 

shed, shack, cabin 

crib 

 

A slight luncheon 

crib (m) 

picnic, packed lunch, snack 

croust 

A lunch taken between meals 

croust (m) 

picnic, packed lunch, snack 

cowle 

A fish-basket 

cawel (m) kewel (m) 

big basket, esp. carried on back 

croggan 

A limpet shell 

crogen (f) 

shell, shellfish (mollusc) e.g. cockle 

Also tile, skull 

cuney, cuny 

Moss; lichen; mildew 

kewny

moss, lichen, mildew, etc.

treag, trig 

Small shell-fish, such as limpets, periwinkles, etc. “Trig” in Celtic Cornish is “ebbing of the sea” 

trig, treg 

 

boos treg 

low tide 

 

shellfish gathered at low tide 

fang 

 

fangings 

To receive or take hold of 

Wages or earnings 

fanja 

to receive or to get 

stag 

To stick in the mud, to be over shoes in the mud 

stag, stagys 

thick sticky mud, stuck, 

jammed  

mazed 

 

curly 

 

Mad, cracked-brained “Mazed as a curly” 

 

 

curley > corniwylen (f) 

 

 

lapwing 


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