TEESDALE PLACE-NAMES. Ill 



Examples : — 



Highfield Hushes, East Hush. 



Pikelaw Hush. West Hush. 



Manor Gill Hush. Close House Hush. 



Htjtton. 



? A.-S. Uith, prey, booty, spoil ; or from Engl, hut and ton =. 

 town of huts. 



Ing ok Ikgs. 



" Icel. eng, a meadow, engi, in pi. engjar, is in Iceland used of 

 the outlying lands, opposed to tim, the home field, and hagi, the 

 pasturage." Cleasby. Mnge, Bosworth and Lye, a hay field at 

 some distance from a farm-house. Moeso-Goth. winja, or winya. 

 Lye. Suio-Cxoth. cBug. Ihre. 



Dan. eng, meadow, pasture; Sw. dng^flattmarh. ih. 



" Ger. einge, field, tract of land. This signification is only 

 preserved in some proper names now written ingen, as Lothar- 

 ingen, Thliringen, Kitzingen, Memmingen." Bosworth. Enge, 

 narrow, strait. 



Dut. and Flem. leemd, weide, "A.-S. {ing, inge, pratum, pas- 

 cuum. Lye), enge, narrow, confined, ing-wyrt, meadow wort : 

 Basing, Eeading, Godalming, Kettering, Steyning." Bosworth. 



Brading, Isle of Wight — of the Bradingas, or of the broad ings 

 there. 



Lat. pratum, pascuum ; It. prato. 



Sp. pasturage ; Port, prado, campo ; Er. pre, prairie: 



"Wei. ing, narrow, strait, confined ; Gael, innis, ionaltradh, 

 feurach. 



Manx Iheanee ; Ir. leana ; Corn, enys, ennis. 



" Lingua Cambriea in qua ing, campum, planitiem denotat ut 

 me docetnuper editio Glossarii Eresniani in v. in hoc." Ihre. 



" An ing, a common pasture, a meadow ; a word borrowed from 

 the Danes. Ing in that language signifying a meadow." Ray. 



^" Ing, where it forms the first root of a word, means a mea' 

 dow, and a field near water," Edmunds, 



