caoch

Irish

Etymology

From Old Irish cáech (blind in one eye; a person blind in one eye), from Proto-Celtic *kaikos (compare Welsh coeg (empty, vain, one-eyed, blind)), from Proto-Indo-European *káykos (one-eyed) (compare Latin caecus (blind)).

Noun

caoch m (genitive singular caoich, nominative plural caocha)

  1. blind, purblind person, creature

Declension

Derived terms

  • caoch láibe (mole)

Adjective

caoch (genitive singular masculine caoich, genitive singular feminine caoiche, plural caocha, comparative caoiche)

  1. (of creature) blind, purblind
  2. (of seed-vessel) blind, empty; (of place) blind, closed up
  3. (card games) nontrump

Declension

Verb

caoch (present analytic caochann, future analytic caochfaidh, verbal noun caochadh, past participle caochta)

  1. (transitive) blind; daze, dazzle
  2. (intransitive, of seed-vessel) become empty, wither
  3. (intransitive) close, become blocked
  4. (intransitive) wink (ar (at)); flicker

Conjugation

Mutation

Irish mutation
Radical Lenition Eclipsis
caoch chaoch gcaoch
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

References


Scottish Gaelic

Alternative forms

  • coech

Etymology

From Old Irish cáech (blind in one eye; a person blind in one eye), from Proto-Celtic *kaikos, from Proto-Indo-European *káykos (one-eyed).

Adjective

caoch (genitive singular feminine caoiche)

  1. empty
  2. blind
  3. hollow
  4. blasted
  5. one-eyed

Noun

caoch m

  1. grampus
  2. mole
  3. blind beast

References

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