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- Q4860019 subject Q8720225.
- Q4860019 subject Q8721226.
- Q4860019 abstract "The earliest reference to beannachadh bàird comes from the postscript of a letter from Professor Garden to John Aubrey, written in Aberdeen 1691 - 1692. The definition given came from a divinity student from Strathspey whose informant was his father, aged 97."A Bard in common Irish signifies a little poet or a fhymer, they use to travel thorow countries and caming into ane house, salute with a rhym called in Irish Beannacha p baird, i.e. the Bard's salutation qch is onlie a short verse or rhym touching the praise of the master and mistris of the house."*The bard’s blessing (Scottish Gaelic: beannachadh-bàird) or poet’s congratulation, was the custom of old in the Scottish Highlands of old, to meet the bride coming forth from her chamber with her maidens on the morning after her marriage and to salute her with a poetical blessing called beannachadh-bàird.*If at any jovial meeting, any man retired, for however short a time, he was obliged, before he was permitted to resume his seat, to make an apology for his absence in rhyme.If he had no talent for poetry, or if, from humour he did not choose to comply, which was seldom the case, he was obliged to pay such a proportion of the reckoning as the company thought proper to propose. This according to Martin Martin was beannachadh-bàird.For a fuller discussion of the phrase, with examples, see Morton.*".
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q106652.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q15026.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q178715.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q180516.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q205665.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q3295537.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q353673.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q35874.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q482.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q49757.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q626510.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q8720225.
- Q4860019 wikiPageWikiLink Q8721226.
- Q4860019 comment "The earliest reference to beannachadh bàird comes from the postscript of a letter from Professor Garden to John Aubrey, written in Aberdeen 1691 - 1692. The definition given came from a divinity student from Strathspey whose informant was his father, aged 97."A Bard in common Irish signifies a little poet or a fhymer, they use to travel thorow countries and caming into ane house, salute with a rhym called in Irish Beannacha p baird, i.e.".
- Q4860019 label "Bard's blessing".