/fʲɑːl̪ˠ/, /fʲal̪ˠ/
OriginFrom Old Irish fell (“deceit, treachery”), from Proto-Celtic *welsos.
- masculinedeceit, treachery, bad faith
- masculinelet-down, failure
- intransitiveprove false to, betray; fail; cheat
Formsfill(genitive, singular) · feallanna(nominative, plural) · feall(indefinite, nominative, singular) · feallanna(indefinite, nominative, plural) · a fhill(indefinite, singular, vocative) · a fheallanna(indefinite, plural, vocative) · fill(genitive, indefinite, singular) · feallanna(genitive, indefinite, plural) · feall(dative, indefinite, singular) · feallanna(dative, indefinite, plural) · an feall(definite, nominative, singular) · na feallanna(definite, nominative, plural) · an fhill(definite, genitive, singular) · na bhfeallanna(definite, genitive, plural) · leis an bhfeall(dative, definite, singular) · don fheall(dative, definite, singular) · leis na feallanna(dative, definite, plural) · feallann(analytic, present) · feallfaidh(analytic, future) · fealladh(noun-from-verb)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0