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How Are You Celebrating Spring?

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Eire1978:

--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on March 16, 2007, 11:14:29 am ---There was heavy frost on the ground here this a.m. But later it's supposed to be 70 degrees!

That's March for you!

My FRiend EDelMar said St. Patrick's Day has just become a day for drinking and there was an NPR story about Romans celebrating the Ides of March with a drunken debauch...we need new rituals for these holidays! Let me know yours.

--- End quote ---


Well, I live in Ireland and tomorrow everybody is going to be more drunk than usual.. lololol Bear in mind that I don't drink, so I'm usually the only sober person of the whole group... It's going to be great fun tomorrow anyway! Plus, the rugby match Italy-Ireland is on tomorrow!

Front-Ranger:
I have a question for you. A girl named Erin told me her name means Ireland. Is that correct?

Eire1978:
That is correct. For more info:


"Erin is a Hiberno-English derivative of Irish Gaelic Éirinn, the dative case of Éire, the Irish word for "Ireland". Nineteenth-century Irish nationalists also used Erin in English as a romantic name for Ireland, as shown in the catchphrase (when speaking of Ireland's experiences with Britain), "Let Erin Remember". According to Irish mythology and folklore, the name was given to the land by the Milesians after the goddess Ériu. Erin Go Bragh (Éireann Go Brách, in standard orthography), often heard during St. Patrick's Day, means "Ireland Forever". The etymological history of the word as it drifted throughout the Gaelic region gave rise to its use by the early Scots to both mean "Ireland", as well as "West", as Ireland lay to the geographic west of Scotland.

Erin is a popular modern name for both sexes, alternatively spelled as Eryn, Erynn, Eirinn, Aeryn, Eiryne or otherwise. It also contributed to many surnames, as well, for example "Erin-Vienne" (West Man/Irish Man) gave rise to the surnames of Irving, Irvine, Ervin, Irwin, Eryvine, Ervyne, etc. There are over 200 known derivations of the Erin root."

moremojo:
Well, if all goes according to plan, this spring will be marked by a good week or so of vacation for me, which will comprise of a trip to Estes Park, Colorado. This will be the first time I will have left the State of Texas in about seventeen years, and the first time I will have returned to Colorado in well over twenty-five!

moremojo:

--- Quote from: Eire1978 on March 16, 2007, 11:55:59 am ---The etymological history of the word as it drifted throughout the Gaelic region gave rise to its use by the early Scots to both mean "Ireland", as well as "West", as Ireland lay to the geographic west of Scotland.
--- End quote ---
Additionally, 'Eire', from which 'Ireland' is derived, is descended from the Proto-Indo-European root aryo-, which meant "noble"--this is the origin of the term 'Aryan', which has acquired unfortunate connotations due to Nazi abuse, but which I understand is still in dignified usage in modern India. 'Iran' also derives from the same Indo-European root; 'Iran' and 'Ireland' both can be understood to mean 'land of the noble'.

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