Uath, Old Irish Úath, hÚath (), is the sixth letter of the Ogham alphabet, ᚆ, transcribed in manuscript tradition, but unattested in actual inscriptions. The kenning "a meet of hounds is huath" identifies the name as úath "horror, fear", although the Auraicept glosses "white-thorn":
- comdal cuan huath (.i. sce L. om); no ar is uathmar hi ara deilghibh "a meet of hounds is huath (i.e. white-thorn); or because it is formidable ( uathmar) for its thorns."
The original etymology of the name, and the letter's value, are, however, unclear.
McManus (1986) suggested a value /y/ (i.e. the semivowel j).
Peter Schrijver suggested that if
úath "fear" is cognate with Latin
pavere, a trace of PIE
*p might have survived into Primitive Irish, but there is no independent evidence for this.
Bríatharogam
In the medieval
kennings, called
Bríatharogam or
Word Ogham the verses associated with
Úath are:
condál cúan - "assembly of packs of hounds" in the Word Ogham of Morann mic Moín
bánad gnúise - "blanching of faces" in the Word Ogham of Mac ind Óc
ansam aidche - "most difficult at night"" in the Word Ogham of Culainn.[Auraicept na n-Éces Calder, George, Edinburgh, John Grant (1917), reprint Four Courts Press (1995), ]