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GAELS |
Celts |
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IRISHMEN |
Celts |
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BRITONS |
Early English Celts |
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COLLECTS |
Gathers Col has upset Celts |
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CELTIC |
The language of the Celts. |
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COLDEST |
Most unfriendly Celts do get into trouble |
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CELTICIZE |
To render Celtic; to assimilate to the Celts. |
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CELTICISM |
A custom of the Celts, or an idiom of their language. |
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ATHLETIC |
Befitting an athlete; strong; muscular; robust; vigorous;
as, athletic Celts. |
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GAEL |
A Celt or the Celts of the Scotch Highlands or of
Ireland; now esp., a Scotch Highlander of Celtic origin. |
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TRILITHON |
A monument consisting of three stones; especially, such
a monument forming a kind of doorway, as among the ancient Celts. |
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CELTIBERIAN |
Of or pertaining to the ancient Celtiberia (a district
in Spain lying between the Ebro and the Tagus) or its inhabitants the
Celtiberi (Celts of the river Iberus). |
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BARD |
A professional poet and singer, as among the ancient Celts,
whose occupation was to compose and sing verses in honor of the heroic
achievements of princes and brave men. |
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BELTANE |
A festival of the heathen Celts on the first day of May,
in the observance of which great bonfires were kindled. It still exists
in a modified form in some parts of Scotland and Ireland. |
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CROMLECH |
A monument of rough stones composed of one or more large
ones supported in a horizontal position upon others. They are found
chiefly in countri... |