ENGLISH AND WELSH DICTIONARY, WHEREIN, NOT ONLY THE WORDS, BUT ALSO, THE IDIOMS AND PHRASEOLOGY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE, ARE CAREFULLY TRANSLATED INTO WELSH, BY PROPER AND EQUIVALENT WORDS AND PHRASES: WITH A REGULAR INTERSPERSION OF THE ENGLISH PROVERBS AND PROVERBIAL EXPRESSIONS, Welsh Tongue. IN TWO VOLUMES. BY THE REV. JOHN WALTERS, Rector of Llandough, Glamorganshire. Lexicon hoc tandem vulgatum (en accipe) curat Ne tendas dubio tramite, lector, iter. THE THIRD EDITION, corrected AND IMPRoved. VOL. II. CLWYDIAN-PRESS: DENBIGH, PRINTED AND SOLD BY THOMAS GEE: Baldwin and Cradock, 47, Paternoster-row, and J. Jones, 3, Duke-street, West Smithfield, London; Messrs. MDCCCXXVIII. 10 KALENDER, and Kalends. See Calendar, Kéelson, s. [a piece of timber above the keel and Calends. Káli, s. [sea-wrack or glass-wort, the ashes of Kaw, s. [the cry of a crow, of a jack-daw] Cre; cogor. To kaw, v. n. [make a noise like a crow, a jackdaw, &c.] Creu; cogor. To kaw for breath. See to Breathe short, &c. To keck, v. n. [as one does when something sticks in the throat, or when the stomach heaves at something nauseous] Corn-dagu (cryn dagn;) bod ar (yn barod i) chwydu; bod â gorwyd (gwrthwyneb) arno wrth weled rhyw ffieidd-beth; bod cylla un yn codi (cwnnu, ymhoelyd) yn erbyn rhyw beth aflan. To keckle a cable, [bind about] Bancawio rhâff angor, amrwymo thàff angor â chordyn rhag ei threulio. Kecks, s. [dry sticks, stalks] Briwydd, crâs galaf, creision. Kedge, or kedger, s. [a small anchor used in haling a vessel up or down a narrow river against the wind and tide] Angoryn (angor bychan) i lasgo llong wrtho ar hyd afon, neu trwy gyfyng-le, yn erbyn y dŵr a'r gwynt; angor Husgo, llusg-angor. To kédge, Llusgo yn erbyn y dŵr a'r gwynt. Keel of a ship, Trum-bren (trum-wydd, trum, cil) llong. Keel, keeler, or keel-fat, s. [a vessel for cooling wort] Twba brecci, ciler frecci, twba, ciler; cerwyn. To keel the pot, [cool, or prevent from boiling over] Coethi'r crochan, diboethi. To keel-hale a criminal at sea [hale from one side of the vessel to the other, under the keel, by a rope] Llusgo (tynnu) dan y trumwydd, tynnu trwy'r tonnau. Keeling-fish, s. Rhyw fòr-bysg. VOL. II. in a ship] Darn o bren yngwaelod llong a enwir felly. Keen, a. [sharp, &c.] Llym, awch-lym, awchus, A keen knife, Cyllell lem. As keen as a razor, Cyn llymmed a'r ellyn. As keen as mustard [Prov.] Cyn llymmed a'r nodwydd ddûr. Keen, [vehement, &c.] See Eager, and Ardent [eager, &c.] Keen, a. [applied to winds, weather, &c. severe, piercing, or excessively cold] Llym, llymdost, tost-lym, teneu-lym, blyng-lym, oerllyd tost, du-oer, oer anoddef, ¶ yn blingo y ffordd y cerddo. Keen, a. [applied to expressions, &c. tart, pun gent, or satirical] Llym, pigowg-lym, surlym, tost-lym, tôst, pigog, yn brathu, yn cnoi. Keen, a. [sharp, sharp-set, or hungry] Awchlym (awchus, llym ei awch) at fwyd, awyddus i fwyd, gwangcus. Keen, a. [applied to the understanding, &c. sagacious Synhwyr-lym, llym (crâff, cyflym) ei ddeall, &c. cyfrwys, ystrywus, &c. See Cunning [subtil, &c.] Keen, [implying the disposition ; rigorous, &c.] afwch. Keenness [vehemence] of desire, of pursuit, &c. See Eagerness, Ardency [eagerness, &c.] and an ardent Desire (under D.) Keenness of appetite, Awch at (awydd neu addug i) fwyd, llym-chwant am beth i'w fwytta, llymder cylla; gwangc. Keenness of expression. See Acrimony, Bitterness, &c. Keenness, [implying the disposition, severity, rigorousness.] See Austereness. Keenness, [of the weather, &c. severity, coldness, or sharpness] Llymder, blyngder, surni, Hym-surni, gerwindeb, oerder, oerni, Hym-oerni, &c. To keep, v. a. Cadw, gwarchadw, &c. To keep, v. a. [have the keeping of] Cadw, achadw, gwarchadw, gwarchod, areilio. To keep [retain] anger, Cadw (dal) digofaint, dal llid, Jer. iii. 12. A |