List of English words of Brittonic origin

The number of English words known to be derived from the Brittonic language is remarkably small. In fact, as far as can be ascertained it is lower than the number of words of Gaulish origin found in the English language, which arrived through Norman French. However, this is to be expected, given the socio-historical relationship between Old English and Brittonic; the influence of the Brittonic language has been more prominent in other areas such as syntax.[1] However, it is possible that many British words have been obscured by their close similarity to Germanic words which are perceived to offer a more likely etymology (e.g. "belly": considered to be from OE bylg, but could easily be from AB *belgā), and also that some of them have been misidentified as Gaulish via French, which are simply unattested until after the Norman invasion.

Other sources of Celtic words in English

This list does not include words of Celtic origin borrowed into English from other languages, namely:

unless there is room for doubt.

List

This list is neither exhaustive nor definitive. Please note that several of the entries are doubtful or have alternative explanations; they are included where a Brittonic explanation is useful and plausible.

basket 
apparently from Brittonic *basc(i)-etto-n, meaning "little wicker thing".[4]
beak 
possibly from Brittonic *becco-s, meaning "beak"; equally possibly from Gaulish via Latin (beccus) via French (bec).[5]
brock 
from Brittonic *brocco-s, meaning "badger".
coomb 
from Brittonic *cumbos-/ā-, meaning "valley".
dad, daddy 
from Brittonic *tatV-, meaning "dad". Equally possibly an independent innovation, although well-attested in Celtic and other Indo-European languages,[6] including German[7]
dam 
possibly from Brittonic *damā-, meaning "female sheep or deer"; alternatively from French dame, "lady, woman".[8]
doe 
possibly from a Brittonic root *da-,[9] perhaps related to *damā- above.
dunnock 
from Brittonic *dunn-āco-s, *dunn-occo-s, meaning "little brown one".
flannel 
possibly from Brittonic *u̯lan-ello-s, meaning "little woollen thing". Possibly from Gaulish via French (flaine + diminutive suffix), or loaned from Welsh (gwlanen).[10]
gob 
possibly from Brittonic gobbo-s, meaning "mouth, lump, mouthful". Equally possibly from Gaelic, or Gaulish via French.[11]
nook 
possibly from Brittonic nuccā-, meaning "nook, cranny, small hole"; French niche would be cognate.
yan, tan, tethera etc. 
and variants. from Brittonic *oinā, *deŭai, *tisrīs etc., heavily corrupted by the nature of the survival.

References

  1. Tristram, Hildegaard 2007: "Why Don't the English Speak Welsh" <The Paper>, retrieved Mar.1, 2014.
  2. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - down (n.2), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  3. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - bin (n.), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  4. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - basket (n.), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  5. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - beak (n.), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  6. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - dad (n.), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  7. Grimm's Wörterbuch - entry deite
  8. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - dam (n.2), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  9. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - doe (n.), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  10. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - flannel (n.), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.
  11. Douglas Harper, "Online Etymology Dictionary" - gob (n.), retrieved Mar. 1, 2014.

External links

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