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Mull (geographical term)
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Mull (geographical term) : ウィキペディア英語版
Mull (geographical term)
Mull is an Anglicization of the Gaelic ''Maol'', a term for a rounded hill, summit, or mountain,〔Mac an Tàilleir p. 89-90〕 bare of trees (it has also been used, in Gaelic, to refer to a forehead, or to a shaved head). As an adjective, the word is used to indicate something which is bare, dull, or bald. In Scotland, the term is most commonly used in the southwest, where it is often applied to headlands or promontories, and, often more specifically, for the tip of that promontory or peninsula.
Gaelic spelling rules require that maol, in certain syntactical arrangements, be lenited: that is, an ''h'' is inserted after the first letter, if the first letter is a consonant (and not an l, n, or r). This h makes the preceding consonant silent, or changes its sound (mh, or bh, for instance, are silent or sound like an English v). Gaelic spelling rules also require that, with the first letter lenited, the last vowel should be slender (an i, or an e). As both vowels in maol are broad, an i is inserted after. These two changes alter the sound of maol (rhymes with mull) to mhaoil (rhymes with uell, or well), as in ''Creachmhaoil'' (creach + maol). Consequently, maol, where it appears combined in place names, may not be Anglicized as ''mull''. Creachmhaoil is typically Anglicized (as a toponym) as Craughwell. The reverse is also true, and though ''mull'' appears in numerous Irish and Scottish toponyms, a convoluted history of Anglicizations means that in many it may have no connection to the word maol.
The Gaelic mullach (often found as mullagh) is a variation of maol/mull. Dwelly's (Scottish) Gaelic-to-English dictionary gives the basic definition: ''the top, summit, or extremity of anything''. It is common in the names of Irish prominences, such as Mullaghmore (''An Mullach Mór''), Mullaghaneany, Mullaghcloga, and Mullaghcarn.
Notable mulls include:
*The Mull of Kintyre
*The Mull of Galloway
*The Mull of Oa, otherwise simply the Oa, a headland on Islay
*The Mull of Cara, a promontory at the south of Cara Island
*The Mull of Logan, a promontory on the Rhins of Galloway
*Mull Head, a headland on the Orkney Mainland
*Creachmhaoil in County Galway, in Ireland.
* Mull Hill, Isle of Man.
Mull, the Inner Hebridean island's name has a different, pre-Gaelic derivation.〔Gammeltoft, Peder "Scandinavian Naming-Systems in the Hebrides—A Way of Understanding how the Scandinavians were in Contact with Gaels and Picts?" in Ballin Smith ''et al'' (2007) p. 487〕
== Notes ==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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