strath
nounEtymology
Borrowed from Irish srath and Scottish Gaelic srath (“wide, flat river valley, strath; floor of river valley; river meadow”), both from Old Irish srath (“grass, sward; river valley; floor of river valley; river meadow”), from Proto-Celtic *stratos (“valley”), from Proto-Indo-European *str̥h₃tós (“spread; stretched”, adjective), from *sterh₃- (“to extend, spread, stretch out”). The meaning was likely influenced by a Cumbric/Pictish cognate; compare Welsh ystrad. Doublet of stratus.
- borrowed from srath
Definitions
A wide, flat river valley.
- [T]hoſe fair Straths that vvater’d are / VVith Tay and Tvveed’s ſmooth Streams, / VVhich gentily and daintily / Eat dovvn the flovvry Braes; / As greatly and quietly / They vvimple to the Seas.
- [T]he other stream, which had its source among the mountains on the left hand of the strath, seemed to issue from a very narrow and dark opening betwixt two large rocks.
A piece of flat land beside a body of water.
- [T]he place is pretty pleasant, close by Forth waterside, att the foot of Craigmor, betwixt which and the watar there is a strath very proper for walking: […]
University of Strathclyde, used especially following post-nominal letters indicating…
University of Strathclyde, used especially following post-nominal letters indicating status as a graduate.
The neighborhood
- neighborStrathallan
- neighborStrathclyde
- neighborStrathcona
- neighborStrathearn
- neighborStrathisla
- neighborStrathmore
- neighborStrathspey
- neighborStrathtay
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for strath. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA