/d̪ˠl̪ˠuːh/, /d̪ˠlˠuː/, /d̪ˠəˈluː/
BunúsFrom Old Irish dlúth, from Proto-Celtic *dlūtis (compare Welsh dylif for Proto-Celtic *dlū-mi-), of uncertain ultimate origin. MacBain mentions a speculative comparison to Ancient Greek θλάω (thláō, “to bruise”), which would imply a Proto-Indo-European root *dʰleh₂w-, *dʰlewh₂- or similar.
- close, compact
- dense, solid
- close, tight
- near
- intense, earnest
Foirmeachadlúith(genitive, masculine, singular) · dlúithe(feminine, genitive, singular) · dlútha(plural) · dlúithe(comparative) · dlúth(masculine, nominative, singular) · dhlúth(feminine, nominative, singular) · dlútha(error-unrecognized-form, nominative, plural) · dhlútha(error-unrecognized-form, nominative, plural) · dhlúith(masculine, singular, vocative) · dhlúth(feminine, singular, vocative) · dlútha(error-unrecognized-form, plural, vocative) · dhlúith(genitive, masculine, singular) · dlútha(error-unrecognized-form, genitive, plural) · dlúth(error-unrecognized-form, genitive, plural) · dlúth(dative, masculine, singular) · dhlúth(dative, masculine, singular) · dhlúth(dative, feminine, singular) · dhlúith(archaic, dative, feminine, singular) · dlútha(dative, error-unrecognized-form, plural) · dhlútha(dative, error-unrecognized-form, plural)
Foinse: Vicífhoclóir