- Europe. It is
particularly strong in
Ireland where it is
known as the cóiste
bodhar (Irish pronunciation: [ˈkoːʃtʲə ˈbˠəuɾˠ]), also
meaning "silent coach",...
- Cheann) or the "Soundless Coach" (literally "deaf coach", Irish: cóiste
bodhar; Hiberno-English:
Coshta Bower,
corrupted to "coach-a-bower") is the name...
-
another version, he is the
headless driver of a
black carriage, the Cóiste
Bodhar. A
similar figure, the gan
ceann ("without a head"), can be
frightened away...
- lane (from bóithrín,
diminutive of bóthar, "road").
bother Possibly from
bodhar, "deaf, bothered, confused", or from bodhraigh, "to deafen, to annoy". The...
- bodhrán
means "skin tray". He also
suggests a link with the
Irish word
bodhar, meaning,
among other things, a drum or a dull
sound (it also
means deaf)...
- "lepers" (e)odh, (e)odha, (e)odhai bodhrán /ˈbˠəuɾˠaːnˠ/ "deaf person",
bodhar /bˠəuɾˠ/ "deaf",
bodhair /bˠəuɾʲ/ "deaf people" (e)ogh, (e)ogha, (e)oghai...
- name)
Colin MacLeod (technically)
Cailean MacLeòid (known as)
Cailean Sheumais Nèill (Neil's James's Colin) (nicknamed)
Cailean Bodhar ("deaf Colin")...
- she lost her head at a
cemetery atop a hill
while riding on her Cóiste
Bodhar twenty years ago. She
traveled far and wide for the head,
ending up in Ikebukuro...
-
consonants to a
centralized [ʊ̈]
before slender consonants.
Examples include bodhar [bˠɐʊɾˠ] ('deaf'),
feabhas [fʲɜ̟ʊsˠ] ('improvement'),
labhairt [l̪ˠɐʊ̈ɾʲtʲ]...
- of his
ability to speak. As a consequence, he was
known as
MacCoinnich Bodhar (Deaf
Mackenzie in Gaelic). From 1784 to 1790, and
again from 1794 to 1796...