sceach

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Irish sceach

Noun

sceach (plural sceaches)

  1. A whitethorn, hawthorn or similar bush.
    • 2019, “I love my juggernaut”, in The Pothole Song Album, performed by Richie Kavanagh:
      I'm in the county Offaly and I'm awfully sorry now. I broke the mirrors of me cab and I'd like to tell you how. With sceachs, boughs and bushes rubbing off me load, I wish the county council would trim along the road.

Irish

Alternative forms

  • scéach

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ʃcax]

Noun

sceach f (genitive singular sceiche, nominative plural sceacha)

  1. whitethorn, hawthorn
  2. more generally, brier, bramble-bush, thornbush
  3. prickly, quarrelsome, person

Declension

Synonyms

  • (whitethorn, hawthorn): sceach gheal
  • (whitethorn): uath (literary)
  • (brier): sceach thalún
  • (prickly, quarrelsome, person): sceachaire

Derived terms

  • sceach i mbéal bearna (stop-gap)
  • sceach i scornach (frog in the throat)
  • sceachach (full of hawthorns, of thorn-bushes; briery, brambly, adjective)
  • sceachóir (haw)
  • sceachra (thorns, brambles)

Further reading

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