Definition
A term of uncertain origin, possibly relating to a type of fabric, trick, or deception, found in historical texts.
Etymology
Likely from Gaelic or Old Irish sources; exact etymology is unclear. This appears in historical Scottish and Irish texts but its precise meaning has been lost or obscured.
Kelly Says
Words like 'breaghe' remind us that historical texts contain vocabulary we can barely reconstruct—entire semantic fields from Celtic languages vanished when speakers switched to English.
Translations
ARالعربية
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
BNবাংলা
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
CACatalà
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
CSČeština
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
DADansk
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
DEDeutsch
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
ELΕλληνικά
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
ESEspañol
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
FAفارسی
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
FISuomi
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
FRFrançais
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
HEעברית
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
HIहिन्दी
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
HUMagyar
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
IDBahasa Indonesia
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
ITItaliano
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
MSBahasa Melayu
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
MYမြန်မာ
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
NLNederlands
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
NONorsk
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
PLPolski
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
PTPortuguês
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
RORomână
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
RUРусский
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
SVSvenska
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
SWKiswahili
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
TAதமிழ்
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
TEతెలుగు
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
TRTürkçe
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
UKУкраїнська
breaghe
bre-a-ghe
VITiếng Việt
breaghe
bre-a-ghe