- Seisnig
- adj. английский (относящийся к, принадлежащий Англии)
Welsh-Russian dictionary (geiriadur Cymraeg-Rwsieg). 2014.
Welsh-Russian dictionary (geiriadur Cymraeg-Rwsieg). 2014.
Little England beyond Wales — is a name applied to an area of southern Pembrokeshire and southwestern Carmarthenshire in Wales. Although distant from the English border, it has been English in language and culture for many centuries. Although it is probably much older, the… … Wikipedia
Sassenach — is a word used chiefly by the Scots to designate an Englishman. It derives from the Gaelic Sasunnach meaning, originally, Saxon , from the Latin Saxones . The modern Scottish spelling is Sasannach . As employed by Scots or Scottish English… … Wikipedia
John Williams (Ab Ithel) — John Williams (bardic name: Ab Ithel) (1811 ndash;August 27 1862), was an antiquary and Anglican priest. Born in Llangynhafal, Denbighshire Wales in 1811, he graduated from Jesus College, Oxford in 1835 to become the Anglican curate of Llanfor,… … Wikipedia
Sassenach — (sas ə nahh ou sæsənæk) est un terme utilisé principalement par les Écossais pour désigner un Anglais[1]. Il s agit d un dérivé du gaélique Sasunnach qui signifie à l origine « Saxon ». L orthographe écossaise moderne est Sasannach.… … Wikipédia en Français
sassenach — [18] Sassenach, the Gaelic name for the English, etymologically means ‘Saxon’. Its ultimate source is probably Saxonēs, the Latin version of Seaxe, which was the Old English term for the Saxon people. The Celts of Scotland took this over as… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
Sassenach — Gaelic for English person, 1771, Sassenaugh, lit. Saxon, from L. Saxones, from a Gmc. source (Cf. O.E. Seaxe the Saxons ). The modern form of the word was established c.1814 by Sir Walter Scott, from Scot. Sasunnoch, Ir. Sasanach, Welsh Seisnig … Etymology dictionary
sassenach — [18] Sassenach, the Gaelic name for the English, etymologically means ‘Saxon’. Its ultimate source is probably Saxonēs, the Latin version of Seaxe, which was the Old English term for the Saxon people. The Celts of Scotland took this over as… … Word origins