Hey, weekend old irish enthusiast here.
I'm very interested in the ties of a language to it's previous iterations, while at the same time being not that good at tracing them yet.
So,
old Irish texts typicaly use "
bran"/"
fiach" for raven and "
badb"/"
tethra" for crow - generaly, including poetic kening. then, where's "
Caróg" comes from?
Couldn't find etymology on the internet, decided to ask folks here - is it a semi-modern word? have you ever encountered it in any older context?
Related to that, is this term understood to have the same root as some other words?
From what I gather, the word follows a basic root+dimunitive suffix scheme, basicaly meaning that "
Caróg" is a little "
car". But what's a "
car"?
I think it's probably onomatopoeic, just mimicing crow's... crowing? And then just adding suffix typical for smaller animals. But if its not, what could it be?
I gathered some roots here, feel free to tell me how wrong I am. I have there both short and long vowels, caus I'm not sure the long vowel in the root can be rulled out complitely going just from the
modern script - and I only found "
Caróg" in
modern script - doesn't mean it's not there though, as "Cáoeiróapch" or whatever.
Roots are
Old Irish:
car(ae) | little friend?
car | little jaw/mouth, eater?
cárr | one living on a rock?
cáer (
caor) | (rowan) berry eater? very Tolkien-esque, probably untrue.
cárn | tomb dweller? where would -
n- go?
cuire | little army, army follower? "
u>a" sound change is unlikely, but relates it to Badb.
cíar | little black (allready taken by "beetle")
crú | smthng blood related? akin to "
cróga"-lively thing? unlikely
gair | one who calls, galts? little whimperer? don't thing "
g>с" is possible here.
My writing conventions may be off relatively to the modern script, so I can provide my source for them, if needed.
P.S. I understand this forum is not for
Old Irish studies, but it's still probably the best place to ask such a question