1. Functional identity of cs̄, ces, cesc, and cair; 2. Origin of cair and ces; 3. ce(a)sc; 4. ní insae, ní ansae, ní hannsa; n’insae; 5. Translation, lento style, stylistic variation; 6. ce(a)st, ceist; 7. Conclusions. Incl. index of texts referred to.
1. Introduction; 2. Historical and typological background; 3. The past participle periphrases in Munster Irish; 4. Possessive ag or agentive ag?; 5. The use of the perfect in Irish; 6. The perfect in Ulster Irish and Manx; 7. Historical background; 8. Conclusions.
[1.] Tactical noise and tactical magic; [2.] Incitement by exhortation and by insult; [3.] laídid, gressaid, grísaid; [4.] The incitement motif in Modern Irish; [5.] The role of inciter; [6.] The early Welsh evidence.
[1.] The first phase: Leinster control; [2.] The period of Munster control; [3.] Godred Crovan: An interloper from the Isles; [4.] Domnall mac Taidc: A Munsterman as king of the Isles; [5.] Magnus Barelegs and Ireland; [6.] The last gasps of Munster dominance; [7.] Connacht’s turn; [8.] Ottar: Another interloper from the Isles; [9.] The overlordship of Ulster; [10.] Dublin invades Man and Man invades Dublin; [11.] Dublin and the Anglo-Norman invasion.
[1.] Manuscript tradition; [2.] Interpolations in D [= MS TCD 1319 (H 2.17)]: The Uí Ruairc material; The Mide material; [3.] How the Cogad came to Bréifne.
Suggests that reworking of OCC focuses on the murder of Seaán Ó Néill (†1567) by MacDonnells of Antrim. Cf. C. Breatnach, in Ériu 41 (1990), 37-60, and 42 (1991), pp. 119-138.
The contributions to the duanairí of Cú Chonnacht Mág Uidhir (†1589) and Féilim Ó Broin (†1630) of Conchubhar Ó Dálaigh’s Gabh m’égnach, a Chú Chonnacht and Cú Chonnacht Ó Dálaigh’s Cionnas do fhúigfinnse Aodh resp.
1. all ‘rock, cliff’; 2. ail ‘rock’; 3. alt ‘joint, etc’; 4. allt ‘height, cliff’; 5. alt and allt contrasted. Also on the contrast between ‘lenited’ l and ‘unlenited’ ll before t in OIr. (vs. GOI, 74).
Pierre-Yves Lambert, in ÉtC 32 (1996), pp. 310-313.