n [f.] a dwelling (? shelter, asylum)?
nodh nó noudh .i. teghdhais
nó durthech, ut est biadh, nodh, menglach Midhcuarta,
O'Dav. 1282
; same quotation
H 3.18 p. 72c
(noud). ba nód
feidle in fatha `the soil was its perpetual domicile' (of a wild
pig),
Metr. Dinds. iii 408.20
(: sód, nodh v.l.). ro bí in fer . . .
'na noid hi Caislib `she smote the man in his home',
242.20
(noid, doid, doit, nóit v.l.).
coro marb Dub Róit . . . inna nóid
féin oc Formaíl,
244.28
(inanoit, inannoid, inandoid v.l.).
cor
loisc macraid . . . i nNóid Dromma búain Bertach,
ib. 24
(inoid, indoid,
indoit
, andoid v.l.). ?g
p.
co n-impod . . .
dochum na nod,
Laws v 174.25 Comm.
(`to his house' tr.). See
also 2 nóad. Cf. further: nodh naoithe `a reliquary to swear
on',
O'Don. Suppl.
(= nódh n-a.?).
cach liu líther is nodh
naoithe dotoing cia dia belaib forsna foirglet fiadnaise,
H 3.17. c. 434
(
O'D. 541
) =
is nodh nuither,
H 4.22 p. 82
(
O'Curry 2119
). nóit .i. annóit (a church?), O'Cl.