Bawn vs Bawan - What's the difference?
bawn | bawan |
A cattle-fort; a building used to shelter cattle.
* 1729', (editor), John Nichols (editor, revised edition), '''1812 , ''The British Classics, Volume 45'': ''The works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, D.D.: Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, Volume XI ,
* 1892 , :
A defensive wall built around a tower house. It was once used to protect livestock during an attack.
* 2004', Colm J. Donnelly, ''Passage or Barrier? Communication between '''Bawn and Tower House in Late Medieval Ireland – the Evidence from County Limerick'', in ''Château Gaillard 21: Études de castellologie médiévale: La Basse-cour: Actes du colloque international de Maynooth (Irlande), 23-30 août 2002 ,
* 1894 , , Chapter 2: Driscoll Spares His Slaves:
* 1899 , :
* 1900 , , Act I:
As nouns the difference between bawn and bawan
is that bawn is a cattle-fort; a building used to shelter cattle while bawan is .bawn
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- (Spenser)
page 163:
- The Grand Question Debated
- Whether Hamilton's Bawn Should be Turned into a Barrack or a Malt-house ? 1729
- This Hamilton's bawn , while it sticks in my hand, / I lose by the house what I get by the land; / But how to dispose of it to the best bidder, / For a barrack or malthouse, we now must consider.
- When he was coming into the bawn at dinner-time, what work did he find Jack at but pulling armfuls of the thatch off the roof, and peeping into the holes he was making?
page 57:
- The cattle, therefore, would be brought into the bawn' at night, as is stated by the early 17th-century writer Fynes Moryson who wrote that the Irish cattle “eat only by day, and then are brought at evening within the ' bawns of castles, where they stand or lie all night in a dirty yard without so much as a lock of hay.”
Etymology 2
Participle
(head)- "Bofe de same age, sir —five months. Bawn de fust o' Feb'uary."
- But ef it has ter be prove' ter folks w'at wa'n't bawn en raise' in dis naberhood, dey is a' easy way ter prove it.
- Yah! You oughter bin bawn a Christian, you ought. You knaow too mach.