14 Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. 



Pairc an Athain — " Little Ford Field." 



Biolarach — (See under Glenville above) ; a well. 



Seana Phdna — " Old Pound " ; the name of a field. The " Pound" was 

 more than a mere place of internment for straying animals or the sheriff's 

 seizures. It was also the temporary depository of the tithe-proctors' prey ; 

 and the word was used locally in the very wide sense of a safe enclosure or 

 yard for cattle. 



Gort Dubh (" Black Harden "), Pairc a tSeagail (" Eye Field "), Paircin a 

 Round or 1'. na Rami ( 'i. Faithce (" A Lawn ") and Feithin (" Little Green 

 Vein ") — a series of interesting field-names. 



Kn<> KADOOBTY, Cnoc Ui Dubhartaigh— " O'Doorty's Hill." O'Donovan, 

 who writes the qualifying term. Diirta, says the meaning is very uncertain. 

 I, however, found the nan ve. Area, 358 A. The townland is entirely 



uninhabited, and its name is a!: gotten in the locality. 



Knoppogk, Cnapog — " Hillock." A 58a.; almost uninhabited. 



Lackkndabuagh . Darach — "Glen-slope of the Oakwood." Area, 



in three divisioi v. Observe the use of the oblique Leacan I'm' 



the nominative. Thi .•■ lios, in tolerable preservation, on Murphy's 



farm. 



Laokendaragh | D. 8. R.). 

 8JDD. i "BockP 



Bothairin Dearg— " Little Red Road "; on south Bide "i' townland. 

 Tuar a Bhothain— i ■ ght-field of (with) the Shed." 



5 ne-pile"; the name of a small Bub-div. 

 thail— " O'Cathal's Trench." 

 : an Aifrinn — " The Mass Rock." 

 "The Lawn (Dalian — A Pillar-stone ; a mountain sub-div. of some 

 fourteen acres. 



Pain in an Airgid — "Little Field of the Money"; in allusion to alleged 

 buried treasi 



-: — Pain- n.i gCloch (" Field of the Stones " ; most 



probably pillar-stones); Pairc na Sgeiche ("Field of the White-thorn 



i b Field of thi ; Pairc na gCoinin 



Field of tb'- Rabbits"); Pairc a Chumaraigh ("Field of the Hills and 



II II .-" I'. Pounds; The Black-: Faoifaun (probably Faoi-Fanaidh) 



I Bel .\ the Incline ") ; Banog (" Little Field " ?), &c., &c. 



Ltravarrig. LtIIiii .i Bharraigh — River-fork"; so named 



from junction, at thi- place ••! i -mall, nameless river with tin- Bride. Area, 



S.D. Unocan — " Little Hill " : a sub-div. 



