Irish edit

Verb edit

innis (present analytic innseann, future analytic innseochaidh, verbal noun innsint, past participle inniste)

  1. Superseded spelling of inis (tell).

Manx edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Old Irish inis.

Noun edit

innis f (genitive singular innis, plural innisyn)

  1. island
  2. islet

Synonyms edit

References edit

Scottish Gaelic edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Old Irish inis.

Noun edit

innis f (genitive singular innse, plural innsean or innseachan)

  1. A small island; an islet; an inch.
  2. A meadow, pasture, field, or haugh: an inch.
  3. A sheltered valley protected by a wood.
  4. A headland.
  5. (Islay) A choice place.
  6. (Ross-shire, Sutherland) A low-lying and sheltered place, where cows are gathered to be milked and where they lie out at night.
  7. Distress or misery.
Synonyms edit
Derived terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

From Middle Irish indisid (tells, recounts, mentions, describes).

Verb edit

innis (past dh'innis, future innsidh, verbal noun innse, past participle inniste)

  1. tell
  2. declare, relate
  3. report, inform
Derived terms edit

References edit