Glukhar
Sentinel76 Astrakhan
thysentinel at HOTMAIL.COM
Fri Oct 11 14:06:42 UTC 2013
The only allusion I can come up with for "glukhar" is "unsolvable crime" in detective slang (akin to "cold case"). It stems from "glukho" (loosely meaning "bleak," "deadbeat," etc.).
Vadim
www.vvinenglish.com
Date: Fri, 11 Oct 2013 14:06:01 +0100
From: anne_mariedevlin at HOTMAIL.COM
Subject: Re: [SEELANGS] Modern-day bards?
To: SEELANGS at LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Fascinating Robert. I have never been a frequent user of either the word glukhar' or capercaille, but I made the association between 'caillie' and 'cailleach' (Irish Gaelic for witch) and not 'coille' (forest) and presumed that both the Russian and anglicised Gaelic words must have referred to a horrible sound the bird possibly makes. I would never have associated caper with 'capall' (modern Irish Gaelic for horse), though.
Does the word glukhar' have any positive or negative associations in Russian? To me as a non-native speaker, it seems negative, but a music venue has chosen it as its name ...
AM
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