óen oín oena aine oina oína oen aen én éin aon oinaidaircechu oinbenchu oinchosaig
Keywords: one; one; single; only; unique; without; equal; peerless; same; in one place; together; unanimously; to-; gether; united; concert; co-operation; concert; simultaneously; together; simultaneously; as; one; individual; im-; passible; invisible; any one; together; at the same time; together; one-; horned; unicorn; one-legged; footed; one-; hoofed; only; child; descendant; one-footed; rider Letter: O COLUMN: 100 Line: 013
oen(oín)num.adj. and pron.óen, Sg. 201 a 11 , Wb. 4 d 21 (oén). oín, Ml. 90 d 1 , Sg. 162 b 1 and in compds. (Ml. and Wb.).
15 gsf.oena, Sg. 203 a 26 . aine, Bcr. 31 c 4 (pron.). apm.oina, Ml.
70 a 4 (adj.); oína, ib. (pron.). Mid.Ir. oen, later aen; in compds.
often én- or (before palatal vowel in follg. syll.) éin-. Mod.
aon. I As num.adj.one. 20 (a) absol.: oen .i. un ab eo quod est unus, Corm. Y 1001. a hoen, a dó, a trí, SR 741. a n-oén ar fichit it tri secht són the twenty-one , Ml. 2 d 2 (treated as neut.). As pred. with cop.: is oín hua tinscanat, ni oín hi foircniter (i.e. they begin but do not end with the same letter), Sg.
25 162 b 1 . Generally in sense unique : Brigtae ba hóen a amra,
Hy. v 43 (`B's miracle was unique ', Thes.). int Imblech . . . is
oin ina erdarcusI. is unapproached in fame , Bruchst. i § 145 ( An. Inisfallen 742 ). a Flaith na naem, robo aen do chaemh thy loved one had no equal (?), Arch. iii 298 § 70. 30 (b) attrib., rarely follg. noun (this construction seems con-
fined chiefly to expressions of time): dia oin `ein einziger
Gott ', Ält. Ir. Dict. ii 10 § 5 (oen, aon MSS.). Moin oin `M. der
einzige ', ib. § 1 . as athair aen dan in coibche sin `it is to the
father alone this nuptial present is due ' (?), Laws iv 60.12 .
35 luid in gilla lathi óen andone day , LL 51 b 2 . laa n-oen and, IT
i 122.19 . PH 74. fec[h]t n-oen ann, IT i 136.17 . (c) generally preceding noun, forming a compd. and re-
maining indeclinable, one, a single. Lenites follg. cons. and
often prefixes t- to s. (When the noun is folld. by prep. ar and
40 a multiple of 10, oen is freq. omitted: bó ar fhichit = oenbhó
ar fh.twenty-one cows .) cid oín dune (gl. nemo), Ml. 33 c 12 . ma
tecmadh secht tengt[h]a i cinn aenduine, ZCP viii 111.20 .
ildáni do óenfiur . . . óendán do sochuidi, Wb. 11 a 16 . triar,
óenfer (of the Trinity), Hy. v 18. in días do gabáil immón
45 n-óenfer, FB 15. comland oenfirsingle combat , Ériu i 114 § 1. eirge athlamh aeinfirrising quickly as one man , CCath. 4436 ,
cf. ZCP xiii 205.1 (where read: aoinfir). fer oínsétche du-nar-
ructhæ act oentuistiua man of one wife to whom only one child
has been born , Thes. ii 241.9 ( Ardm. 18 a 1 ). Echaid Oenáu 50 (= one-eared ), Trip. 126.18 . Eochaidh aonshulaof the one eye ,
ML 86.23 . ro sníastar ar oenchois ┐ ar oenláim ┐ oensúil,
TBC 564. ba hoinlebor leo int saltairthey considered the
Psalter a single book , Hib. Min. 2.56 . Lugid Macnía (.i.
oenainm), ZCP viii 312.5 (i.e. Macnía is a single word, a name
55 not a patronymic). oen-chailech indises Matha . . . a dō
indises Lucas, PH 5219. ind aenailidh dún ar ttriur | is
aenbla lin dar ar cendwe three shall be in one grave with one
shroud about us , Anecd. ii 30 § 4. hi curach óenseichedof one
hide , Trip. 222.11 . oín fechtonce , Ml. 138 b 8 . oin[ḟ]echt, 34 a 9 .
60 du intiuch oín laia journey of one day , 140 a 1 . oigreadh
éntráithice of twenty-four hours , Ériu iv 218.16 . bás aonuaire `instant ', Keat. iii 2272. ata oenní ocund do denam `I have
one expedient ', PH 1192. cidh énní dhibha single item , Laws
ii 156.3 Comm. 65 Often used to strengthen cech (cach): ni choemsaitis . . .
cech oenfochraic dib d'aisnes, SR 520. cech laithi, cech
óenbliadain, 1458 . mórfessiur . . . oc cor cacha hóenslaite,
FB 2. gulban cach óen-eóin, Met. Dinds. iii 258.26 . tri mile
ceol . . . cacha henchlaisi, RC xxvi 146.7 . 70 Used to emphasize a follg. superlative: issí in dictatoirecht
éncéim ba huaisle buí occo, CCath. 95. The numeral often appears superfluous: teuir oenaidchi three nights , Thes. ii 291.6 ( Ml. Poems i 2 ). co n-accai ni . . . .i.
in n-aenmnaí for fertais in charpaita woman , TBC 201. co
75 cualaid gul na henmnaa woman's weeping , RC v 201.6 . coic
oinfissighfive searchers , Duan. Finn i 45.5 . Esp. with nouns
denoting number like días: toirmeasc itan eindeisiquenching
the thirst of two , Ériu iv 224.6 . dochuaidh T. entriar marcach
tarsawith three horsemen , FM iii 576.4 . oen-ocht ṁbliadan,
80 LL 181 b 22 ( Arch. Hib. ii 49 ). Such compds. are used in pl. without inflexion of oen:
óenlitrib, gl. singulis litteris, Sg. 28 a 12 . frisna hoen n-apstal
déceleven , PH 5123. tri cét fer for oencosaib ┐ for oenlamaib
┐ aensuilib `each using only one leg ', Dinds. 41 ( RC xv 431 w ).
85 dariachtadar óendóene d'Ultaib . . . d'fórithin Conculaind .i.
Senal U. ┐ dā mac Géggea few individuals , TBC 4205.
Letter O, Column 101
rosiachtadar aendhaíne asin máidm sin, Alex. 291. ra étlaitis
. . . ar oenḟeraibone by one , LL 268 b 26 ( MU 44 ). go n-imthightís
na haonmhna Erindwomen used to traverse Ireland alone , FM
ii 1164.4 . 5 (d) used before noun in sense only: ni óentorbe doraricc dún not merely one profit , Wb. 19 b 23 . ba hed a n-oínbiad isin
díthrub (= de mannae cibo solitario), Ml. 97 d 8 . bá hóenglunn
dó sercc di mnai a bratharhis only crime , IT i 121.3 . Tomas
. . . is e oendiscipul nā boi imalle frisna hapstalu, PH 6728. 10 énmac Dé, Ériu iv 114 § 17. Domnall . . . enrí Tefthasole
king , RC xviii 18.1 . enrige in domainsole (undivided) sove-
reignty , Alex. 114. se oenur 's a óenbenhis wife , SR 1888. Findabair d'óenmnaíF. as a wife , TBC 3031. mad ben tsaor
í, biadh 'na henmnáoi agam, ZCP i 125.1 . tene an aonbeime
15 [na n-oenbeim v.l. ] .i. Aodh (i.e. one who strikes but once?),
Anecd. ii 52.1 . (e) unique, withoutequal, peerless: eirr óengaile, LU 10356. 'con óengabaind na hElgcaElg's foremost smith , Ériu iv 108 y .
ar muin meicc óenfir Hérennof Erin's chief , 102 § 43. oen-
20 guinid Cilli Darae, ZCP ix 169.16 . Cf. TBC 5375. oenoinmit
fer nErennthe greatest fool , Ériu v 28.2 . Tomaltach . . .
enbranan cloinne Maolruanaidh `chief hero ', FM iii 150.2 .
aenollam na nGaedhel, RC xviii 191.8 . (f) often the same (= Lat. idem); in this sense declined in
25 Glosses. inna oena méite (gl. tantidem), Sg. 203 a 26 . inna oína
oina-sa (gl. hos eosdem), Ml. 70 a 4 . Cf. Wb. 5 d 1 . ni tre oínmetur
ro ceta [int ṡailm], Hib. Min. 6.182 . aensmacht ar cach
ceathrathe same `smacht'-fine , Laws iv 104.24 . bid grád
n-oenfir forrathey shall all have the same rank , Trip. 152.22 30 (= in pari habendos respectu, Colg.). ac oenmummib daronsat
ceirdgnimrada gailethe same instructresses , TBC 3006. fer
oentreue dōfellow-tribesman , PH 75. d'a fir aencluichi nō
aentigheas his playmate or housemate , CCath. 2432 , cf. 644 .
ni uīth cuit don m[n]ai . . . a n-oentig aithigh tighi, Cáin Ad.
35 § 2 . t'fhear êanaoisethy coeval , Dán Dé xvii 3. in tan do
bamar-ne ag aenfoghlaim gaiscidhlearning . . . together , ZCP x
304.29 . clanna ar saor, meic ar moghadh | dheit . . . fá
énomhan `united in fear ', Studies 1921, 75.4 . ata sinne . . .
dh'aoinchreidimh ┐ dh'aontsacramuintibhone in faith and
40 sacraments , Luc. Fid. 378.7 . Similarly in a number of stereotyped adverbial phrases:
i n-ait . . . oenbailiin one place, together; ó oenbél (-guth) with one voice, unanimously; for oenchoíon one path = to-
gether; d'oendán(lit. `of one profession') united, in concert:
45 co ndernsat caratrad do beth d'oeṅdhán i cend Aristobuil,
LB 140 a 15 = Todd Lect. vi 76 z (see Scot. Gaelic Studies
i 30 ); d'oenláimin co-operation, in concert, LB 140 a 16 (d'én-
laim); i n-oenḟechtsimultaneously; d'oentoíbtogether; i n-
oenuairsimultaneously, etc. 50 Folld. by FRI or OCUS(= as):oenfholaid . . . frissin athair of one substance with the Father , PH 177. do laechaib fa
óengním ┐ óengaiscid fris féinof the same prowess as himself ,
FDG 733. i n-énaimsir [f]rium-sain my time , CCath. 1704. marb a n-aonmhis . . . ocus Fiachrain the same month as F. ,
55 ZCP xi 44 § 50. sinn d'éinfhine is an t-Airdrí, Dán Dé xv 15. go gcuire ionn i n-aointeach 's an cuire fionn, xiv 26 . Fiach-
raidh . . . ó aoinchill ┐ Fiaccfrom the same church as F. , Mart.
Don. Oct. 12 ( p. 272 x ). aen .i. inann, O'Dav. 165. (g) in late Mid. and Mod.Ir. aen (aon) used alone with a
60 noun = any ; aen . . . amháinone, a single . The sense any arises naturally from the use of oen in neg. or indef. state-
ments. cipe toltnaigfes don chomdid i n-aen-urd díb, PH
4014 . aen cach .i. nech itir ut est: ni aera óen cachhe does not
satirize any one , O'Dav. 11. ata in t-aenridiri amain agar
65 leonadh uile, ZCP vi 41.30 . en-spirut amhainone spirit , Fl.
Earls 136.15 . aointsióth amháin do bheith i nÉirinn uile `general peace ', Keat. iii 3135. go mbeidheadh corp na
hEagluise ar aonbheusaibh amháinthat . . . might follow the
same customs , Eochairsg. 5.36 . 70 II As indef. pron.(a) one, an individual (declined). ednon
óen (gl. ĭdem), Sg. 201 a 11 , cf. 55 b 3 and Ml. 70 d 1 . inunn oín,
Ml. 56 b 1 . cuit inna aine ┐ inna aile, Bcr. 31 c 4 (referring to
`prima luna ' and `secunda l. ' of Lat. text). inna oína oina-sa these same individuals (gl. hos eosdem), Ml. 70 a 4 . cach oén
75 creitfess hí Cristevery one , Wb. 4 d 21 . fer . . . saiges a chert do
cech óen, FB 11. pianad cech oein as dir duit, PH 6599. malarta cech oin olchenathe ruin of all , 714 . nach oen déraich
a tírany one who deserts his country , Mon. Tall. 17. oenaib.
dedaib. tredaib, LL 123 a 9 . 80 Folld. by part. gen. or prep.: i ṅ-óen na lith-saon one of
these festivals , Fél. Ep. 20. cotlait . . . i n-oen a mbrug, LL 144 b 14 . gebid . . . oen na tire, 333 a 42 , cf. ZCP viii 318.33 .
inn-aen na rigbaili romor, CCath. 5824. cech oen uainneach
of us , SR 1076. is aen uaib nom-braithfi-sea, PH 2372. oen
85 dona Cristaigib, 1220 . aon don chuideachta, Fl. Earls 36.18 .
i n-aghaidh gach aoin againn, Maguires of F. § 88. (This use
Letter O, Column 102
was prob. at first confined to cases in wh. oen was preceded
by cach, cech or folld. by a pers. pron.; with a subst. the older
idiom was: fer dena feraib.) In expressions of time: aen na
fecht annonce , Ériu v 122.34 . ag siubhal . . aon do laitib 5 one day , BNnÉ 239 § 169. aen na n-oidhche (aen do n-oidchib
v.l. )one night , Buile S. 124.21 . aon d'oidhchibh, FM vi 2280.
23 . Hence the later idiom: aen do láone day , Ériu iii 150 § 3 ;
áon do ló, Ériu v 86.16 ; 96.28 . oen da laí, RC xxiii 396 § 1 (= older lá n-oen). 10 With art.: in t-oen neamfoitnech nemaicsidethe One im-
passible, invisible, PH 178. Cf. bíaidh solud Israel mar theine
┐ a Aóinnáomhtha mar lasairhis Holy One , Isa. x 17. lé
bréithir na n-áon náomhthaof the holy ones , Daniel iv 17 .
saor . . . mo aon ó neart an mhadraidh, Psa. xxii 20. 15 (b) in late Mid. and Mod.Ir. any one, esp. in neg. and indef.
sentences: [gnúis] nach obann aonthat rejects none , A. Ó
Dálaigh xviii 4 . atbert N. na ro choemnagair aen do leigen
inntithat he could not let any one into it , Leb. Gab. i 10.3 . níor
bh'uamhan liom aon dom chreichI had no fear of being raided
20 by any one , Ériu i 95.19 . tuc Dia nert . . . duit ná tucad d'áon
romad, BNnÉ 7.4 . dá mbiadh i n-a iongnadh ar aonif any one
should wonder , Eochairsg. 16.36 . imdeargadh aoin gan
adhbharabuse of any one , Content. xxiv 13. III Used with prep. in the follg. adverbial phrases: ar oen
25 (fri)together, at the same time (with):cach baili i fagabhar iat
araenwherever both are found together , Laws ii 414.9 . mas
etarru araen atat buachaili `if the servants belong to them both ',
416.11 . céin bemaid araen beóas long as we both live , ZCP iv
239.29 . in mac gēntar uatha ar áenwho will be born to them
30 both , viii 113.16 . curab da ndēruib aráen doronadh an loch of the tears they both shed , Maund. 179. dob í inghean Uí N.
a máthair ar aonthe mother of them both , Maguires of F. § 8. do rithreadar ar aon i n-aoinfheacht (= ambo simul), TSh. 10325 . 35 With FRI: co tisad ar oen fri Ultualong with , TBC 2 1477. tanic in rig . . . ┐ in uli shacart ar oen fris, PH 2159. an ccéin
báoi ar aon léa anam `so long as he lived along with his soul '
(? as long as body and soul were together ), ZCP i 64 § 69. Folld.
by ocus: dofóeth Marcán . . . ar óen ocus Medraige, Met. Dinds.
40 iii 320.36 . dochuaidh Bairri . . . ar áen ┐ Eolang, BNnÉ 17.
19 . mar oen (fri)together (with):doruacht mar aon re fuigeall `along with the remnant ', Laws ii 238.7 Comm. oc fledugud
mar oen fris, PH 2372. téid . . . mar aon re hiomad d'ógaibh,
45 Keat. ii 55. cosa . . . mar aon ris gach mball oile, TSh. 60. bud hi an bāidh braithreisi | beith dūinn mar aonthat we
should be together , ZCP viii 214.12 . IV In some cases oen forms genuine compds. in which the
meaning of the follg. word is modified: 50 (a) chiefly with adj., esp. adj. derived from noun: ¤adair-
cech: apm.oinaidaircechu, gl. unicornes, Ml. 45 a 5 . ¤bélrach:
dorat rath na n-ilbelra doib . . . is iat oenbelraig có sin .i.
Ebraispeaking (only) one language , PH 2517. ¤bennachone-
horned, as subst.a unicorn, LL 135 a 50 . tír nathrach is oen-
55 benach, 136 a 19 . ap.oinbenchu, Ml. 45 a 5 . See oenberach (treated separately below). ¤charptech, TBC 4252 (where
it is used of one who drives alone, a warrior without a chario-
teer). fuilliucht ind óenchárptig, 713 . ¤cosachone-legged (-footed):gsm.ind oinchosaig, Goid. 71.3 . pl.na hoenchossaig
60 odra, Rawl. 76 a 46 . ¤dánach, ¤dírech: beas aendanach,
bid aendireach `who has one art, let him have one "dire" ', Laws
v 108.11 (opp. to il-dánach, -dírech). ¤faebrach: do biailib
oenfoebrac[h]aibone-edged , CCath. 5442. ¤fiaclachone-
toothed , Leb. Gab. i 78.9 (en-). ? ¤folbthach: a oenḟolbthaig
65 oeniressaig! `of one substance and one faith [with the Father ]'
(? only praiseworthy, only faithful , reading ṁolbthaig), PH 161 . ¤geinne: óengeinne Déonly-begotten , Hy. vi 25 ; cf. tar
in mac n-óengine .i. Críst, Ériu i 196 § 13. ¤gelaltogether fair
or white, pure white , common epithet of silver: oengel in dún,
70 Met. Dinds. ii 72.17 . cúach argit oengil, LL 34 a 54 . do cnaimh
aoingel elifinte, CCath. 4691. do cholomhnaib marmair aingil,
Fl. Earls 152 x . a díí láim oengela, LB 124 b 26 . im thrí .ix.
con n-éngel, LU 6768 ( BDD 28 ). tred do chaorchaibh aen-
gealae, BNnÉ 56 § 63. ¤ingnech: Monica éningnechone-
75 hoofed, CCath. 3841 (explanation of the name Monychus <
μονόνυχος). ¤iressach, see molbthach. ¤menmnach: in
t-ennac aenm. `single-minded ', BColm. 12.16 . co henme[n]m-
nachunanimously , Cog. 120.6 . ¤trabdae (< treb), gl. soli-
tarius, Ml. 46 d 1 . 80 (b) with noun: ¤ciniud in Laws, onlychild or descendant,
the last living member of a `fine', Thurneysen, ZCP xiv 347
§ 3 b. is e bes foloing aencinnid `the food-rent which the sole
survivor submits to ', Laws ii 256.25 . bes oencinneda, iv 302.20 .
biathad in aencineda gin fine, ii 354.3 Comm. ¤coissidm.:
85 oenchossid sciach `a one-stemmed thorn ', ZCP iii 7 § 25. mac
ind oenchoissedaone-footed, IT i 102.17 . ¤echaidm.a rider:
Keywords: popular; assembly; gathering; funeral; games; harbour; Roman Forum Letter: O COLUMN: 103 Line: 005
5 1 oenacho,n. and m. (oén) ns. (with art.) a n-oinach sin, Ériu ii
100.1 (Tenga Bithnua). a n-óenach, LU 3239 ( SC 3 ). óenach
mbúada, 4549 . ( TBC 59 ). Later masc.áonach (m., gs.-aigh,
np.-aighi), IGT Dec. § 55.11 . (a) in primary sense `a reunion', hence a popularassembly 10 or gathering, generally (though not exclusively) for games,
races, and similar contests, as distinguished from an `airecht'
or assembly for communal business; commonly transld.
`fair', though it does not seem to have been intended for com-
mercial purposes. The chief oenaige were held periodically at
15 fixed places. The word is often used of the place where the
assembly was held and hence figures in many place-names,
usually folld. by a gen. but occas. absol., e.g. mod. Nenagh
(Co. Tipperary) < an Aenach < a n-oenach; fón Aenach,
AU ii 376.15 (= mod. Enagh. Co. Roscommon). See Hogan,
20 Onom. s.v. oínach . i n-oinach, gl. in theatrum, Thes. i 497.38 ( Ardm. 183 b 2 ).
aenach, gl. agon, Gild. Lor. 45. in t-oinach rígda (= agon
regale), Lat. Lives 21.9 . oenach Tailten do cumusc, AU 830 =
commixtio agonis Talten, 716 . oenach .i. āine ech, Corm. Y
25 1002 (i.e. horse-races). d'echtres nō d'oenuch, Sitzb. Pr.
Akad. 1919 v 93 § 26 . fer ro chóemaig na cleasa | ic gním óenaig
ech-thressa `holding a meeting for horse-races ', Met. Dinds. iii
350.23 . oenach dogníthe la Ultu cecha bliadna, SC 1. bá
hiat dā comthinól airegda no bítis oc feraib Herend .i. fes
30 Temra cecha samna . . . ┐ óenach Tailten cech lúgnasaid, LU 4212 . iar cor graphand doib i n-óenach na Cruachna, FB 66. ruc Cu C. buaid ind óenaig, ib. Tir Tailten . . . iss ed tir in sein
bas oenach cluchi dot claind-siu, ZCP xiii 372 § 4 (Baile in
Scáil). iar n-aighe aonaigh Life fri tríbh láibh, FM ii 672.11 .
35 aimser aenaid (during which fighting was forbidden), Laws v
302 y . ní hinbaid oenaig ind inbaid garb gemretta so, LL 264 b 12 = MU 18.21 . gaibid som a dillut oenaig immi, TBC 2727 = a dilatt n-oenaich, TBC 2 2038. do cuir a deisi aenaigh
┐ oirechtais uime, ZCP vi 27.34 . i Cruachain dognithea
40 aenaichi Erind, Ériu ii 178.12 (aenuigv.l. ). dligit amais
aenechu, ZCP iv 468 § 5. In wider sense, of other gatherings of a social nature: in
cetna oenach Olimpthe first Olympiad , Rawl. 73 b 21 . oenach
Slebhe Sion, Ériu ii 98 § 3. a haenach nime `from the assembly of
45 heaven ', Fél. p. xxiv § 3 . i lLoind Ela . . . ba he an tres priomh-
aonach Erenn eissem .i. aonach Taillten ┐ aonach Cluana
meic Nois ┐ Lainn Ela, BNnÉ 178 § 30 (where `aonach' in the
case of Cluain m. N. and Lann E. refers to the religious com-
munities in those places). tri haonaighe Erenn . . . an tres
50 aonach m'aonach féin, ib. § 31 (the speaker is St. Colmán of
Ela). Cf. Triads 35 : tri háenaig Hérenn: áenach Tailten, á.
Crúachan, á. Colmáin Ela. In follg. exx. seems used as a semi-abstract: a haithle a
n-oenaig ┐ a n-aniusa (= their sports), FA 30. bíadd prantigi
55 . . . ised aonach ndedenach indsin is coir do imbirt isna
mbelaib iar praind hi sessam, Mon. Tall. 83 , where it seems
to mean a religious observance (chant) in which a number
take part (but text may be corrupt). o.¤ ngubaefuneralgames: coro clantar mo lia ┐ coro hagthar
60 m'oenach ṅgubae, ZCP iii 3.4 ( Rawl. 130 b 28 ). ro cuindig . . .
airm i n-adnaicfidea co n-agtais a haenach and, Dinds. 18 ( RC xv 311.20 ). claidhter a fert . . . ┐ digníther a aonach
gubha la hUltu, MS. Mat. 473.21 . (b) transf. of place where an `oenach' or assembly is held:
65 for forod áenaig in dūine, LU 10194 = oenaic, ZCP iii 232.3 (of the green or playground adjoining a chief's residence). ro
gab dar oenuch mBreg Leth, IT i 119.11 , cf. dar Aenach
mBreg Leith, BDD 1. Similarly in place-names. Somet. of
a burial-ground: co fil [corp Dá Thí] for lár Óenaig Crúacan,
70 LU 2801 , cf. 2851 . ni fil cnoc i nOenuch Cruachna nach fert
rig nó rigflatha nó mna nó eicis, YBL 192 a 50 . Lagin i nOenuch
Albi [no adnaictis] . . . Fir Muman i nOenuch Culi ┐ i nOenuch
Colman, LU 4111 , 4112 . There was also an O.¤ Colmáin in S.
Leinster: coscradh Oenaigh C. la Muiredhach for Laigniu
75 Desgabair, AU 826 ; cf. in circo Colmain hi lLifiu, LL 321 h 44 =
in circio C., BB 177 e 47 . Of a harbour:óenach na n-ethar n-étromm, Met. Dinds. iii 168.4 . Of the Roman Forum:is lais ro címdaiged oenach
na Románach, LB 150 b 47 . for cathairib in oenaig isin Roimh,
80 CCath. 5145. (fig.) óenach mbúada a thulchind, TBC 2 59 = o.¤ buada ina thilchind, TBC 258 (`ein Festplatz des Triumphes ',
Wind.). sinidh mo p[h]enn bec braenach | tar aonach lebor
lig-oll, ZCP 8.12 .
2 oenachsome kind of injury or wound? is cutruma trin
85 coirpdiri cacha cneidi do rith ann cach aenaigh coruicci tri
oenaighe `in the case for each "aenach"-injury' , Laws iii 346.2 ,
Letter O, Column 104
do rith ann cach oenaig co cenn tri aenaighi, ib. 9 . ar oenach,
ib. 16 .