Primarily a proper name (place or person), but can refer to historical contexts, particularly in Irish history and nobility.
From Irish 'Éar-dhomhain' or 'Orm-ond,' related to Ormond Castle in Ireland and the historical Earldom of Ormond. The word carries strong associations with Irish medieval history and the Butler family.
Ormond appears in Irish history as a powerful earldom controlled by the Butlers, but it's faded from everyday conversation—which shows how easily place names and titles disappear from living language when the power structures that created them no longer exist.
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