meigallo

Galician

Etymology

From meiga (witch) + -allo.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mejˈɣaʎo̝/

Noun

meigallo m (plural meigallos)

  1. (folklore) evil eye, witchery, spell, bane
    • 1863, Rosalía de Castro, Cantares Gallegos:
      Ora en ti penso disperto, / ora en ti penso durmindo, / e sempre en ti estou pensando / coma si foses feitiço; Seique meigallo me deche / na festa do San Martiño, / amasado cos teus dedos / nunha bola de pantrigo
      I think about you while awake, I think about you while sleeping; I'm always thinking about you as if it was witchery; I think that you gave me an enchantment, in the fair of Saint Martin, kneaded with you hands inside a ball of wheat bread
    Synonym: feitizo
  2. (folklore) sickness caused by witchery, the dead, demons or spirits
    • 1895, Heraclio Pérez Placer, Contos da Terriña:
      Calquer pensara que un meigallo se lle meteu no corpo, ó ver como cambeou de súpeto. Esborrouse da súa boca a sonrisa pracenteira, fuxiu dos ollos o mirar churruscandeiro, velado agora por humedeceres de bágoas
      Anyone would think that she was under a spell [that a meigallo entered her body] seeing how she changed overnight: the pleasant smile fade from her mouth and the burning looks fled from her eyes, clouded by the wetness of the tears

References

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