lochan
See also: lochán
English edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Scottish Gaelic lochan, diminutive of loch (“lake”).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
lochan (plural lochans)
- (Scotland) A small loch.
- 2009, John Sadler, Glencoe, Amberley, published 2009, page 23:
- The moor is a bare and ancient landscape; the dank mosses studded with a mosaic of tiny lochans, stumps of vanished trees, largely devoid of sustenance for man and beast, an almost mythical emptiness where dragons, outlaws and elves might easily be imagined!
- 2017 February 18, Kari Herbert, The Guardian:
- The Cairngorms national park has some of Britain’s harshest weather and the heaviest snowfall in Scotland, creating snowfields that stretch to the horizon. Lochs, lochans and waterfalls can be frozen solid.
Anagrams edit
Güenoa edit
Noun edit
lochan
References edit
- Čestmír Loukotka, Johannes Wilbert (editor), Classification of South American Indian Languages (1968, Los Angeles: Latin American Studies Center, University of California), page(s) 62
Scottish Gaelic edit
Etymology 1 edit
loch (“lake”) + -an; compare Irish lochán
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
lochan m (genitive singular lochain, plural lochanan)
- Diminutive of loch
- pond
- Thuit mo mhac anns an lochan.
- My son fell into the pond.
Etymology 2 edit
Noun edit
lochan f pl