![]() ![]() The original members, all of whom also serve as members of the Center Subcommittee, include Karen Hagenlocker (Advisory Group Chair), Thomas Booth, Leslie Li, Beth Lilley, Judy Lindstrom, Sandra Smith (Center Subcommittee Chair), and Center Director Gregory Wittkopp. Described as a “landscape framework plan,” the final section defines four Heritage Areas, including the Japanese Garden.Ģ016, Summer: The Center forms the Cranbrook Japanese Garden Advisory Group to lead the effort to rehabilitate the Japanese Garden. ![]() Sources: Wiktionary, Am Faclair Beag, Online Manx Dictionary, Teanglann.2016, May 16: Following archival research into the Japanese Garden's naming history and, with support of the Center’s Subcommittee and the approval of the Board of Trustees Properties Committee, the name of the garden officially returns to the Japanese Garden from the Oriental Garden.Ģ016, June 16: The Board of Trustees of Cranbrook Educational Community adopts a new campus master plan, Toward Cranbrook 2030: One Vision, One Mission, One Plan, designed by Reed Hilderbrand of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Words marked with a * are reconstructions. The Galician word braña (mire, bog, marsh, moorland) is thought to come from the Proto-Celtic *bragnos, possibly via Celtiberian. The English word bran comes from the same Gaulish root, via the Middle English bran(ne) / bren and the Old French bren. The Gaulish word brennos was borrowed into Vulgar Latin and ended up as brener (to trick, fool, hoodwink) in French, via the Old French bren (bran, filth, excrement). Words from the same PIE root include flair, fragrant, and bray in English, and брезгать (to be fastidious/squeamish, to disdain) in Russian. Today we’re looking at the words for rotten and related things in Celtic languages.īrén = foul, putrid, rotten, stinkingīréan = foul, putrid, rotten to pollute, putrefy bréanlach = filthy place, cesspool bréanóg = refuse heap bréantachán = stinker bréantas = rottenness, stench, filthīreun = foetid, putrid, disgusting, filthy, nasty, stinking breunlach = sinking bog breunachd = corruption, rottenness breunan = dunghill, dirty person, dirty/smelly object, crabbit/grumpy person, grouch breunad = degree of foetidness/putridness, degree of disgustingness/filthiness/nastiness, degree of stink breuntas = stench, stink, putrefaction, putridnessīreinn = foetid, loathsome, malodorous, nasty, offensive, pestilential, putrid, rancid, rotten, smelly, stinking breinnaghey = to become smelly, putrefy, taint, stinkīraen = rotten, putrid, corrupt, mouldy, withered, fragile rot, putrefaction, corruption, decay braen(i)ad = rotting, decomposition, rottenness, putridness braenu = to rot, putrefy, make/become corrupt, become mouldy braenedig = rotten, putrefied, corrupt, festering, gangrenous, mouldy, woundedīreyn = putrid, rotten breyna = to decay, rot breynans = decay breynder = rotīrein = rotten breinadur = corruption breinañ = to rot, decay breinidigezh = putrefactionĮtymology: from the Proto-Indo-European *bʰreHg- (to smell, have a strong odour). ![]()
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