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Unpaved boreen on the Beara Peninsula, County Cork.
Paved boreen in Baile Éamon, Spiddal, County Galway.

A boreen or bohereen (/bɔːˈrn/ bor-EEN; Irish: bóithrín [ˈbˠoː(h)ɾʲiːnʲ, bˠoː(h)ˈɾʲiːnʲ], meaning 'a little road') is a country lane, or narrow, frequently unpaved, rural road in Ireland.[1][2][3]

"Boreen" also appears sometimes in names of minor urban roads such as Saint Mobhi Bóithrín (Irish: Bóithrín Mobhí), commonly known as Mobhi Boreen in Glasnevin, Dublin.[4][5]

Boreens may be private rights of way that are not open for public use.[6]

In parts of Ulster, a boreen is often called a loanin, an Ulster Scots word.

Etymology

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The word "boreen" comes from the Irish word bóithrín ("little road"), which in turn comes from bóthar ("road").

In origin, a bóthar was a cow path ( means cow), a track the width of two cows, so bóithrín meant a little cow path. Bóthar was one of the five types of road identified in medieval Irish legal texts, the others being slige (on which two chariots could pass), rót (on which one chariot and two riders could pass), lámraite (a road connecting two major roads) and tógraite (a road leading to a forest or a river).[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Boreen. Focail.ie, national database of Irish language terminology. Retrieved: 2016-04-10.
  2. ^ Boreen. Foclóir Gaeilge-Béarla (Ó Dónaill, 1977). Retrieved: 2016-04-10.
  3. ^ boreen, n. Oxford English Dictionary, Second edition, 1989; online version November 2010. Retrieved: 2011-01-04.
  4. ^ Saint Mobhi Bóithrín at Irish Placenames Database. Retrieved: 2011-01-04.
  5. ^ Mobhi Boreen on Google Maps. Retrieved: 2011-01-04.
  6. ^ "Rights of way".
  7. ^ "Béarla, Punt, Fliuch: A history of Ireland in 10 little words". The Irish Times.


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Hiberno-English

" Bockety Adjective Bacach (lame) Unsteady, wobbly, broken Boreen Noun Bóithrín Small rural road or track Ceili/Ceilidh /ˈkeɪli/ Noun Céilí Music and dancing

List of English words of Irish origin

ground (from bogach, "bog", from bog, "soft"). boreen A country lane (from bóithrín, diminutive of bóthar, "road"). bother Possibly from bodhar, "deaf, bothered

List of Irish words used in the English language

soldier. From Irish buannacht, billeting or billeting tax. boreen – (from bóithrín meaning "small road") a narrow rural road in Ireland. brat – a cloak or

Road surface marking

road has no markings, and grass is growing in the middle it is known as a bóithrín (or English: Bohereen or Boreen). In urban areas, the shoulder is not usually

Roads in Ireland

the most common term for 'road' in modern Irish: its diminutive form, bóithrín, (or boreen in English) is used as a term for very narrow, rural roads

Ulster English

derived from bog (see above) boreen a narrow road/lane/track noun From Irish bóithrín meaning "small road". bout ye? how are you? greeting From the longer version

Connacht Irish

(in Irish). Indreabhán: Cló Iar-Chonnachta. Ó Ráighne, Mícheál (1994). Bóithrín na hAille Báine (in Irish). Indreabhán: Cló Iar-Chonnachta. [novel, Connemara]

Effrinagh

Shannon. It is dotted with lakes and traversed by boreens (from the Irish bóithrín, meaning a small road). James Gralton came from Effrinagh, where he built