In Cnósach Focal ó Bhaile Bhúirne, p197, there is this:
Quote:
sathach (=soitheach): sothí muc, iad folamh ocrach deaghláin, agus gur dheocair geanas do chuir ortha.
It's difficult to understand this, but soitheach is a word for an animal's womb. Pigs' wombs? Empty, hungry (how can a womb be hungry?), capacious, and.....?
Geanas is listed in Ó Dónall's dictionary as a literary word for "procreation, conception". Oddly this word isn't in Dinneen's dictionary, unless it is the same word meaning "purity, chastity" and Dinneen didn't recognise any other meaning for it?
Could "agus gur dheocair geanas do chuir ortha" mean "it is difficult to get them pregnant"? Or am I barking up the wrong tree entirely?