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单词 celt
释义

celt


Celt

C0193000 (kĕlt, sĕlt) also Kelt (kĕlt)n.1. One of an Indo-European people originally of central Europe and spreading to western Europe, the British Isles, and southeast to Galatia during pre-Roman times, especially a Briton or Gaul.2. A native speaker of a modern Celtic language or a descendant of such a speaker, especially a modern Gael, Welsh person, Cornish person, or Breton.
[French Celte, sing. of Celtes, Celts, from Latin Celtae, from Greek Keltoi.]

celt

C0192900 (sĕlt)n. A common prehistoric tool of stone or metal, shaped like a chisel or axe head.
[Medieval Latin celtis, chisel probably back-formed from celte, a word found in some manuscripts of the Vulgate (Job 14:24) and interpreted as the ablative of a Latin *celtis, chisel, but probably a misreading of Latin certē, certainly.]

celt

(sɛlt) n (Archaeology) archaeol a stone or metal axelike instrument with a bevelled edge[C18: from Late Latin celtes chisel, of obscure origin]

Celt

(kɛlt; sɛlt) or

Kelt

n1. (Languages) a person who speaks a Celtic language2. (Peoples) a person who speaks a Celtic language3. (Peoples) a member of an Indo-European people who in pre-Roman times inhabited Britain, Gaul, Spain, and other parts of W and central Europe

celt

(sɛlt)

n. a prehistoric ax of stone or metal without perforations or grooves, for hafting. [1705–15; < Late Latin *celtis chisel]

Celt

(kɛlt, sɛlt)

also Kelt



n. 1. a member of any of a group of Indo-European peoples inhabiting the British Isles and large areas of W and central Europe in antiquity. 2. a member of any of several modern peoples descended from the ancient Celts and speaking Celtic languages, including the Irish, Scots of the Scottish Highlands and Hebrides, Welsh, and Bretons. [1695–1705; < Latin Celtae (pl.) < Greek Keltoí]

celt

A prehistoric stone or metal implement shaped like an ax head.
Thesaurus
Noun1.celt - a member of a European people who once occupied Britain and Spain and Gaul prior to Roman timesCelt - a member of a European people who once occupied Britain and Spain and Gaul prior to Roman timesKeltEuropean - a native or inhabitant of EuropeGael - a Gaelic-speaking Celt in Ireland or Scotland or the Isle of ManBriton - an inhabitant of southern Britain prior to the Anglo-Saxon invasionsGaul - a Celt of ancient Gaul
Translations

Celt


Celt

(kĕlt, sĕlt) or

Kelt

(kĕlt). 1 One who speaks a Celtic language or who derives ancestry from an area where a Celtic language was spoken; i.e., one from Ireland, the Scottish Hebrides and Highlands, the Isle of Man, Wales, Cornwall, or Brittany. 2 A member of a group of peoples first found in SW Germany and E France early in the 2d millennium B.C., but perhaps much older than that. The Celts were a group of tribes speaking Indo-European dialects. Armed with iron weapons and mounted on horses, they spread rapidly over Europe, crossing into the British Isles, moving S over France, Italy, and Spain, fighting the Macedonians, and penetrating into Asia Minor, where they raided Hellenistic centers. The Celts introduced the newly developed iron industries. Their wealth from trade and from raiding helped to maintain their dominance over Central Europe during the Iron Age. The La TèneLa Tène
, ancient Celtic site on Lake Neuchâtel, Switzerland, that gives its name to the second and final period of the European Iron Age. It is characterized by an art style that drew upon Greek, Etruscan, and Scythian motifs and translated them into highly
..... Click the link for more information.
 culture developed among the Celts. Greek influences that stimulated Celtic culture included the introduction of the chariot and of writing. Art flourished in richly ornamented styles. The Celts lived in semifortified villages, with a tribal organization that became increasingly hierarchical as wealth was acquired. Priests, nobles, artisans, and peasants were clearly distinguished, and the powers of the chief became kinglike. The Celts believed in a demonic universe and relied on the ministry of the druidsdruids
, priests of ancient Celtic Britain, Ireland, and Gaul and probably of all ancient Celtic peoples, known to have existed at least since the 3d cent. BC. Information about them is derived almost exclusively from the testimony of Roman authors, notably Julius Caesar, and
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. Much Western European folklore is derived from the Celts. By the 4th cent. B.C. they could no longer withstand the encroaching Germanic tribes, and they lost most of their holdings in the north and in W Germany. From that time on, Celtic history becomes confused with that of the many unsettled tribes in Europe. Celtic language and culture were variously dispersed among peoples of little historical identity, and until the 20th cent. historians obscured the very important differences among these groups by naming them all Celts. Further confusion has resulted from the designation of the Celts as a racial group. To the Greeks and Romans, the Celts were tall, muscular, and light-skinned, but it is believed that these were qualities of the Celt warriors rather than Celts in general. The term Celtic is actually a cultural one, unrelated to physical heredity. It implies a cultural tradition maintained through many centuries of common history in the same general area. See also Iron AgeIron Age,
period in the development of industry that begins with the general use of iron and continues into modern times. In Asia, Egypt, and Europe it was preceded by the Bronze Age. It did not begin in the Americas until the coming of the Europeans.
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Bibliography

See N. Chadwick, The Celts (1970); D. Adam, The Edge of Glory: Prayers in the Celtic Tradition (1988); A. McBain, Celtic Mythology and Religions (1988).

Celt

 

an ancient cutting tool, a special kind of bronze ax or adze, used in the working of wood and digging. The characteristic feature of the celt is a sleeve located at right angles to the blade into which an angular handle is inserted. Celts were used widely in almost all European countries in the second and first millennia B.C. In the USSR numerous celts of the Bronze Age and early Iron Age have been found along the lower Dnieper, along the middle Volga, in the Kama Region, and in Siberia near modern Krasnoiarsk and Minusinsk.

Celt

, Kelt1. a person who speaks a Celtic language 2. a member of an Indo-European people who in pre-Roman times inhabited Britain, Gaul, Spain, and other parts of W and central Europe
www.ibiblio.org/gaelic/celts.html
http://celt.net/Celtic/celtopedia/indices/encyintro.html

CELT


AcronymDefinition
CELTCeltic
CELTCorpus of Electronic Texts (Ireland)
CELTCentre for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching (Lancaster University, UK)
CELTCenter for Educational Leadership and Technology (Marlborough, MA)
CELTCentre for English Language Teaching (Stirling, Scotland)
CELTCenter for Engineering Learning and Teaching
CELTCalifornia Extremely Large Telescope
CELTCrypto Equipment for Low-Speed Telegraphy
CELTCompagnie Europeenne Loisirs et Tourisme (French: European Leisure and Tourism Company)
CELTConsolidated Entry Level Training
CELTCoherent Emitter Location Techniques
CELTCognitive Emotional Linguistic Training

Celt


  • noun

Synonyms for Celt

noun a member of a European people who once occupied Britain and Spain and Gaul prior to Roman times

Synonyms

  • Kelt

Related Words

  • European
  • Gael
  • Briton
  • Gaul
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