Irishry

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Irishry
Irishry Hist. or arch. (ˈaɪərɪʃrɪ) Also 5 -ery. [f. Irish a. + -ry. Cf. Sc. ershry, s.v. Erse.] 1. collect. The native Irish, as opposed to English settlers in Ireland.1375 Barbour Bruce xvi. 317 (Camb. MS.) He had apon his party The eryschry [Edin. MS. Irschery; ed. 1616 Irishry]. c 1450 Holland Ho... Oxford English Dictionary
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Irishery
Irishery see Irishry. Oxford English Dictionary
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Rowland White (Irish writer)
unable to travel, but was encouraged to write two further works between 1569 and 1571, A Discors (discourse) Touching Ireland and The Disorders of the Irishry wikipedia.org
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Scottishry
Scottishry (ˈskɒtɪʃrɪ) [f. Scottish a. + -ry; cf. Irishry, Welshry, etc.] Scottish character or nationality; a Scottish trait, Scottishness.1958 C. Watson Coffin, scarcely Used iv. 44 ‘Ye hear tha' frae the wee booy!’ he chortled... ‘For heaven's sake, drop that phoney Scottishry, Rupert.’ 1973 Dail... Oxford English Dictionary
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Patrick White (judge)
politics in the 1560s, and was the author of several influential treatises, including "Discourse touching Ireland" (c.1569) and "The Disorders of the Irishry wikipedia.org
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Highlandry
ˈHighlandry [f. highland + -ry, as in Irishry, Welshry.] Highlanders collectively.a 1771 Smollett cited in Ogilvie. Oxford English Dictionary
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Galwegian Gaelic
makes big play of Kennedy's Carrick roots (albeit in the rankly insulting terms that are part of the genre) and strongly associates him with Erschry, "Irishry Such eloquence as they in Irishry [Gaeldom] useIs what defines your perverse taste. wikipedia.org
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Joseph Campbell (poet)
poemsThe Man-Child (1907) poemsThe Gilly of Christ (1907) poemsThe Mountainy Singer (1909) poemsMearing Stones (1911) travel writingJudgment: A Play (1912)Irishry wikipedia.org
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Erse
Erse, a. (ɜːs) Forms: 4 Erische, Erysche, 4–7 Ersch(e, 7 Erish, 8 Earse, 8– Erse. [An early Sc. variant of Irish; either repr. OE. {Iacu}risc, or ON. {Iacu}rskr, or possibly descending from a parallel form retaining the vowel of OIr. {Eacu}riu Ireland.] † 1. In early Sc. use: = Irish.c 1375 Barbour ... Oxford English Dictionary
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The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie
Dunbar characterises Kennedy, a Gael and native speaker of Galwegian Gaelic, as "of the Irishry" who speaks a barbarous Highland dialect, as physically wikipedia.org
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heathenry
heathenry (ˈhiːðənrɪ) [f. heathen + -ry.] 1. Heathen belief, practice, or custom; heathen character or quality; heathenism.1577–87 Holinshed Chron. II. 28/1 In conuerting the Iland from heathenrie to christianitie. 1583 Stubbes Anat. Abus. i. (1879) 144 It is all one, as if they had said, bawdrie, h... Oxford English Dictionary
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Walter Kennedy (poet)
Such eloquence as they in Irishry [Gaeldom] use Is what defines your perverse taste. You have very small aptitude for good verse-making. wikipedia.org
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-ry
-ry, suffix a reduced form of -ery, occurring chiefly after an unstressed syllable ending in d, t, l, n, or sh (the usual type being words of three syllables with the stress on the first), but also in a few cases after stressed vowels or diphthongs. The older examples sometimes represent OF. forms i... Oxford English Dictionary
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Magennis
Sir Hugh Magennis, the son of Donal Óg Magennis, was called by Sir Henry Bagenal the "civillist of all the Irishry", with Sir Nicholas Bagnall cited as wikipedia.org
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coignye
▪ I. coynye, coignye, n. Irish Hist. (ˈkɔɪɲɪ) Forms: 5 (?) coynee, 5–6 coygnye, 6 coignye, coynye, coine, 7–9 coigny, coyne, 7 coynie, coigne, (8– erron. coyn, coin). [a. Irish coinnemh (koiæpaln.ev), with nasal v) billeting, entertainment, one billeted, a guest: OIr. type *condem, whence condmim vb... Oxford English Dictionary
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