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单词 irish scot
释义

Irish Scotn.

Brit. /ˈʌɪrɪʃ ˌskɒt/, U.S. /ˈaɪrɪʃ ˌskɑt/
Forms: see Irish adj. and n. and Scot n.1
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: Irish adj., Scot n.1
Etymology: < Irish adj. + Scot n.1 Compare post-classical Latin Scoti Hibernienses , plural (mid 14th cent. in the passage translated in quot. a13871). With sense 2 compare earlier Scots-Irish n. 1, Scottish-Irish n. 1, and Ulster Scot n.
1.
a. Celtic History. = Scot n.1 1, esp. a Dalriadan settler in what is now western Scotland. Cf. Scotch-Irish n. 3.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of Europe > British nation > Scots nation > [noun] > native or inhabitant of Scotland > parts of Scotland
ScoteOE
Irish Scota1387
Irish Scot1521
Irishman1529
Moravian1577
Moravea1600
highlander1610
lowlander1621
trewsman1639
Whiglander1682
northland1698
Norlander1716
plaid1749
bonnet man1763
plaid-man1763
norland1768
Irish Gael1771
Galwegian1774
southern1812
Gallovidian1875
Fifer1887
Clydesider1921
teuchter1940
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 151 Þe Pictes..toke hem wifes of Irisch Scottes [L. de Scotis Hiberniensibus].
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 151 Irisch Scottes [L. Scoti, qui et Hibernienses] londede at Argoyl.
1547 J. Harrison Exhort. Scottes sig. c.iij After whiche tyme, with the helpe of the Irishe Scottes, thei [sc. the Picts] vexed the Britaines with continuall incursions.
1606 W. Warner Continuance Albions Eng. xiv. lxxxiii. 346 Till the Picts, a People stout, Were by th'inuading Irish-Scots long thence debelled out.
1668 H. P. Cressy Church-hist. Brittany vii. 180 Sinel the Son of Finchado by the preaching of S. Patrick beleived in Almighty God: and he was the first among the Irish-Scotts, who was baptis'd by the Holy Bishop.
1756 F. Warner Eccl. Hist. Eng. I. ii. 85 It is probable that they all received the liturgy in use among the Irish Scots.
1834 Belfast News Let. 7 Feb. The terms on which the Irish Scots or Dalriads obtained possession of Cantire.
1880 J. Bonwick Our Nationalities: who are Scotch? 107 Wallace represented the party of Anglo-Scots that had virtually triumphed over the real Irish-Scots and Caledonians [sc. the Picts].
1903 W. H. Fairbairns Notes on Cathedrals (Lichfield) Diuma, an Irish Scot, was one of the four, and was made the first bishop of Mercia by Oswi.
1987 R. Miers Scotland ix. 233 This was Pictland, home to those mysterious aboriginal settlers in the land, indigenous long before the Irish Scots, the Angles and the Welsh began to push north.
b. An inhabitant of the Scottish Highlands or Islands, esp. one who is a Gaelic-speaker. Cf. Scotch-Irish n. 1. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of Europe > British nation > Scots nation > [noun] > native or inhabitant of Scotland > parts of Scotland
ScoteOE
Irish Scota1387
Irish Scot1521
Irishman1529
Moravian1577
Moravea1600
highlander1610
lowlander1621
trewsman1639
Whiglander1682
northland1698
Norlander1716
plaid1749
bonnet man1763
plaid-man1763
norland1768
Irish Gael1771
Galwegian1774
southern1812
Gallovidian1875
Fifer1887
Clydesider1921
teuchter1940
1521 Earl of Surrey in State Papers Henry VIII (1834) II. 82 ODonayll..writeth that, by myn advyse, he hath waged 3000 Irish Scottes, with many horsmen to resist Your Graces ennemys.
1577 R. Holinshed Hist. Scotl. 274/1 in Chron. I The Irishe Scottes bare a naturall grudge agaynste the Englishe Scottes.
1631 J. Pory in R. F. Williams Birch's Court & Times Charles I (1848) (modernized text) II. 125 The same Mackey, a Western or Irish Scot,..was, of all the Scots, most affected by the King of Sweden.
1652 P. Heylyn Cosmographie i. sig. Bb4v The Highlanders or Irish Scots, inhabiting the Hebrides, and the West parts of the Continent adjoyning to them.
1700 J. Brome Trav. iii. 196 The Irish Scots call this City Dun-eaden the Town Eaden or Eaden Hill.
1797 J. Sinclair Statist. Acct. Scotl. XIX. 182 Some names of a lower epoch, from the intercourse of the inhabitants with Highlanders, or Irish Scots, are doubtless from the Erse.
2. An inhabitant of Ireland who is of Scottish origin or descent; (later) spec. = Ulster Scot n. 1. Cf. Scotch-Irish n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of Europe > the Irish > [noun] > native or inhabitant of Ireland > descended from Scots
Scottish-Irish1573
Ulster Scot1640
Irish Scot1685
Scotch-Irishman1872
Scotch-Irish1916
1685 A. Lovell tr. G. Bate Elenchus Motuum Nuperorum in Anglia ii. 9 (margin) A Colony of Scots transported into Ulster, by Authority from King James... The Irish Scots.
1699 G. Ridpath (Second) Dialogue betwixt Jack & Will 14 The brave Col. Murray, a rough hew'n Irish Scot.
1864 in Era (1865) 1 Jan. 15/1 He was descended from a family of Irish-Scots that have cultivated their own land at Tollanacree [sic] and Kilmore, in county Down, Ireland,..from the time of Charles I.
1915 W. H. Eldridge Henry Geneal. 212 Of all the blood that was offered up to purchase the liberties of our great people none was shed more bravely..than that which coursed in the arteries of the Irish-Scots.
1969 Times 1 Mar. 9/1 This large, jolly, bovinely angry Irish Scot with his blood red trumpet of oratory.
3. An inhabitant of Scotland who is of Irish origin or descent.
ΚΠ
1960 M. Golesworthy Encycl. Boxing 147/2 This Irish-Scot [sc. boxer Tom Milligan], whose real name was Mulligan.
1984 Hist. Stud. 21 489 The Scots who eventually departed must have possessed a substantial Irish background: these were the Irish Scots to set beside the better known Scotch Irish.
1997 Calgary (Alberta) Herald (Nexis) 14 Sept. a19 A young Irish-Scot from Glasgow.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2011; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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