Jump to content

bawn

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

From Irish bán, alternative form of bábhún (walled enclosure).

Noun

[edit]

bawn (plural bawns) (Ireland)

  1. A cattle-fort; a building used to shelter cattle.
    • 1596 (date written; published 1633), Edmund Spenser, A Vewe of the Present State of Irelande [], Dublin: [] Societie of Stationers, [], →OCLC; republished as A View of the State of Ireland [] (Ancient Irish Histories), Dublin: [] Society of Stationers, [] Hibernia Press, [] [b]y John Morrison, 1809, →OCLC:
      But these round hills and square bawnes, which you see so strongly trenched and throwne up
    • 1729, Jonathan Swift, The Grand Question Debated, Thomas Sheridan (editor), John Nichols (editor, revised edition), 1812, The British Classics, Volume 45: The works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, D.D.: Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, Volume XI, page 163:
      The Grand Question Debated
      Whether Hamilton's Bawn Should be Turned into a Barrack or a Malt-house − 1729
      This Hamilton's bawn, while it sticks in my hand, / I lose by the house what I get by the land; / But how to dispose of it to the best bidder, / For a barrack or malthouse, we now must consider.
    • 1892, Joseph Jacobs (editor), Jack and His Master, Celtic Fairy Tales:
      When he was coming into the bawn at dinner-time, what work did he find Jack at but pulling armfuls of the thatch off the roof, and peeping into the holes he was making?
  2. A defensive wall built around a tower house. It was once used to protect livestock during an attack.
    • 2004, Colm J. Donnelly, “Passage or Barrier? Communication between Bawn and Tower House in Late Medieval Ireland – the Evidence from County Limerick”, in Château Gaillard 21: Études de castellologie médiévale: La Basse-cour: Actes du colloque international de Maynooth (Irlande), 23-30 août 2002, page 57:
      The cattle, therefore, would be brought into the bawn at night, as is stated by the early 17th-century writer Fynes Moryson who wrote that the Irish cattle “eat only by day, and then are brought at evening within the bawns of castles, where they stand or lie all night in a dirty yard without so much as a lock of hay.”
Derived terms
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

Verb

[edit]

bawn

  1. Pronunciation spelling of born.

Anagrams

[edit]

Welsh

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Verb

[edit]

bawn

  1. first-person singular imperfect subjunctive of bod

Synonyms

[edit]

Mutation

[edit]
Mutated forms of bawn
radical soft nasal aspirate
bawn fawn mawn unchanged

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

Yola

[edit]

Adjective

[edit]

bawn

  1. Alternative form of baun
    • NOTES TO THE WEDDEEN O BALLYMORE
      (1) Garrane Bawn is Irish

References

[edit]
  • Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828) William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, London: J. Russell Smith, published 1867, page 98