51Թ

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amadan

[ ah-muh-dawn ]

noun

Irish.


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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of amadan1

< Irish á, diminutive (with suffix ) of amaid a foolish woman < *anmedy witless (< *an-man-t-i; mental 1 ), crossed with *ameth (< *ambi-bito-; compare Old Irish éٳ foolish) very foolish
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Drawing a term from Gaelic folklore, Dowd calls him "the most democracy-destroying, soul-crushing, self-obsessed amadán ever to occupy the Oval."

From

Belfast’s Lyric had to cancel its co-production of 1984 with Bruiser Theatre Company but instead launched the initiative New Speak: Re-imagined, in which Northern Irish talents including Amadan Ensemble, Dominic Montague and Katie Richardson respond to the lockdown crisis.

From

He had heard of one whom he did not wish to meet, the Green Harper: also of a grey man of the sea whom islesmen seldom alluded to by name: again, there was the Amadan Dhû ... but at that name Coll made the sign of the cross, and remembering what Father Allan had told him in South Uist, muttered a holy exorcism of the Trinity.

From

"Aren't you the amadan to be biting the tongue between your teeth?" he said.

From

He asked the Amadan who he was, and what he had done to have the impudence to come there and meet him.

From

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