Places 2
Other
common suffixes are –jy (SWFM –ji) and –ty (SWFM –ti). Again, they do not occur on their own
but are derivations of MC chi meaning house (LC chei). They are unstressed endings. More
specific than –va, they denote the building where an activity takes place or a
thing is found. Words ending in –jy or –ty are also often
neologisms, though there may be older, more genuine and idiomatic ways of
saying the same thing.
gwarijy
|
theatre,
playhouse
|
chei gwary
|
theatre,
playhouse
|
plen an gwary
|
amphitheatre,
playing place
|
crow
|
shed,
hut
|
crowjy (SWFM krowji)
|
cottage,
cabin
|
manerjy
|
manor
house, country house
|
scol (f)
|
school
|
scoljy (m)
(SWFM skolji)
|
schoolhouse
|
melin, belin (f)
|
mill
|
melinjy, belinjy (m)
place name Mellingey
place name Bolingey
was Mellingy in 1516
|
mill
house
|
boos
|
food
|
bosty
|
restaurant
|
pobas
|
to
bake
|
peber
|
a
baker
|
chei forn (vorn)
|
a
bakery, a bakehouse
|
chei pobas
|
a
bakery, a bakehouse
|
kig
|
meat
|
kiger
|
a
butcher
|
kigty
|
a
butcher’s shop
|
chei kiger
|
butcher’s
|
Example:
Me eth dhe’n chei pobas ha perna bara, tesen safran ha nebes
torthellow.
|
I
went to the bakery and bought bread, a saffron
cake and a few buns.
|
Quiz 1
1.
What do you suppose is going on in an atomva?
2.
If bath
is a coin, what could be the word for a mint
where coins are made?
3.
If brag
is malt, what do you suppose is going
on in a bragjy?
4.
Whereabouts in the Cornish countryside might you find a jynnjy?
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