出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2024/10/17 19:35 UTC 版)
The noun is borrowed from Scottish Gaelic cèilidh (“a pilgrimage; a social call, visit; a sojourn; a social gathering with dancing, etc., ceilidh”) and Irish célidhe (archaic), céilí (“a social call, visit; a social gathering with dancing, etc., ceilidh”), both from Old Irish célide (“social call, visit”), from céile (“companion, fellow; neighbour”) (ultimately from Proto-Celtic *kēiliyos (“companion; servant”), possibly from Proto-Indo-European *ḱey- (“to settle”)) + -ide.
The plural form ceilidhean is borrowed from Scottish Gaelic cèilidhean.
The verb is derived from the noun.
ceilidh (plural ceilidhs or ceilidhean) (Ireland, Scotland, also attributive)
ceilidh (third-person singular simple present ceilidhs, present participle ceilidhing, simple past and past participle ceilidhed) (intransitive)