Words for broad & wide in Celtic languages.
| Proto-Celtic | *ɸlitanos = broad, wide |
|---|---|
| Gaulish | litana = broad, wide |
| Old Irish (Goídelc) | lethan [l͈ʲeθan] = broad, wide |
| Irish (Gaeilge) | leathan [ˈl̠ʲahənˠ] = broad, wide, extensive |
| Scottish Gaelic (Gàidhlig) | leathann [l̪ˠʲɛhən̪ˠ] = broad, wide, extensive |
| Manx (Gaelg) | lhean = wide, sheet, sweeping, flat of nose, extensive, broad, full (of chin) |
| Proto-Brythonic | *lɨdan [lɨˈdan] = broad, wide |
| Middle Welsh (Kymraec) | llydan = broad, wide |
| Welsh (Cymraeg) | llydan [ˈɬədan] = broad, wide, long or wide (stride); sturdy, stout |
| Cornish (Kernewek) | ledan [‘lɛdan] = broad |
| Old Breton | litan = broad, wide |
| Breton (Brezhoneg) | ledan = wide, broad |
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *pl̥th₂-enos, from *pleth₂- (flat). [source].
Words marked with a * are reconstructions.
Sources: Wiktionary, Am Faclair Beag, Online Manx Dictionary, Teanglann.ie, Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru, Gerlyver Kernewek, Dictionnaire Favereau