broch

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See also: Broch and broc'h

English

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology

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From Scots broch, from Old Norse borg, from Proto-Germanic *burgz. Doublet of borough and burgh.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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broch (plural brochs)

  1. (archaeology) A type of Iron Age stone tower with hollow double-layered walls found on Orkney, Shetland, in the Hebrides and parts of the Scottish mainland.
    • 1933, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Cloud Howe (A Scots Quair), Polygon, published 2006, page 268:
      Finella's carles builded the Kaimes, a long line of battlements under the hills, midway a tower that was older still, a broch from the days of the Pictish men […].
    • 1972, George Mackay Brown, Greenvoe, Polygon, published 2019, page 20:
      The last man slid the bolt in the single low narrow door. The broch was impregnable then.
    • 1991, Diana Gabaldon, chapter 29, in Outlander, London: Random House:
      Ian's eyes rolled slowly up, as though following the rough stones of the broch upwards. 'That tower rises sixty feet from the ground,' he told me, 'and it's thirty feet in diameter, wi' three floors.'

Scots

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Etymology

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From Old Norse borg.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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broch (plural brochs)

  1. broch
  2. burgh, town

Spanish

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Scots broch

Noun

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broch m (plural broches)

  1. broch

Welsh

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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From Middle Welsh broch, from Proto-Brythonic *brox, from Proto-Celtic *brokkos.

Noun

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broch m (plural brochod or brochion)

  1. badger
Synonyms
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Derived terms
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Etymology 2

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Possibly an extension of etymology 1.

Noun

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broch m (uncountable)

  1. foam, froth
    Synonym: ewyn
  2. anger, rage
    Synonyms: dicter, llid, cynddaredd
  3. uproar, tumult
    Synonyms: twrw, cyffro

Adjective

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broch (feminine singular broch, plural broch, not comparable)

  1. raging, fuming, chafing
    Synonyms: dig, llidiog, trystfawr

Mutation

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Mutated forms of broch
radical soft nasal aspirate
broch froch mroch unchanged

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.