Monday, November 1, 2010

Any Luggage Not Made In China

place names of Celtic origin can



Areli
bit.
Peschiera del Garda, VR
Aryl (enrollment) Areli ( Tabula Imperii Romani ) naviculariorum Arelicensium In college (enrollment) Ariolica ( Peutingeriana , IV, 3), Ariolica ( Cosmografia Ravenna, IV, 30). •
compounds formed by the prefix gall. are-'from', 'before' = 'in front of the east', and the voice lic (c) 'Flat stone slab' and maybe 'cliff' (to see. Irl. oaks, the CIMR. llech , the br. lec'h 'flat stone, slab, tombstone' \u0026lt;celt. * heddles) and may therefore have the meaning of 'in front of the cliff' or 'east of the slab of rock (Sirmione)'. A. Karg thought instead to training, perhaps Celtic are - + * lik-'be wet, sliding', cf. the ancient hydronyms Licca and Licusati , current and Lech Gail , which according to P. Anreiter, however, generated by. * (h 1) Leik- 'bend, meander'.
C. Marcato (1990), sv Peschiera del Garda ; GB Pellegrini (1987): 106, 212, GB Pellegrini (1990b): 116-7; X. Delamarre (2008): 200-1; A. Falileyev (2007), s. vv. Areli , Ariolica , Licca , Licusati , lic (c) o-.

arteries
bit.?
TV (?)
(?)
• According to JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, arteries depends on a celt. Arto- , or limb- 'bear' or related to the. irl. Article 'stone' the inclusion of el'ARTUAS Todi.
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 224, 227, X. Delamarre (2008): 55-6.

Artoz
Domegge, BL
Current Nartóz , "cleared meadow with a large flat section (MT Vigolo).
in Artoz (1768).
• According MT Vigouroux, could come from the Celts. limb- 'bear' the + suff. * -ŭcĕus . Not ruled out entirely by staff training Art (o) - \u0026lt; limb- 'bear'.
Vigolo MT (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 55-6.

Arusnatium, Pagus
bit.
Fumane, VR
page (s) Arusnatium , Arusnatibus , [pa] gi Arusnati [um ] (registration of the I-II century AD.). • The
pagus Arusnatium is mentioned in the Latin inscriptions Fumane Exhibit A (which probably was the administrative center of pagus itself). Constituted "an enclave ethno-linguistic particular ("etruscoide") in the Verona area (Val Policella) [GB Pellegrini (1987): 98]. Etna. Arusnates aruśnas is the name, a name that is written on a votive of Xerxes (Pergine, TN). According
A. Falileyev Arusnates should not be a name of Celtic origin, you can still pull over to place names and NP in aru * (o) - 'field, harvest' \u0026lt;ie. * h 2 erh 3 - 'plow, break (the ground)'. For
X. Delamarre it would be a form * aru-SNA-ti- (whose analysis, however, is incomplete) from aru- (?) + -SNA-, ego * - (s) na- 'swim', the accepted anus. irl. SNA- 'run, swim' and NP Mannisnavius \u200b\u200b two inscriptions Verona, interpreted as * manni-sna-vius (GB Pellegrini [(1991): 119] mentions an 'expression' manisnavius that appears in the inscriptions of Fumane).
GB Pellegrini (1987): 47, 98, 212, GB Pellegrini (1990b): 107; GB Pellegrini (1991): 53, 119; A. Falileyev (2007), s. vv. Pagus Arusnatium , aruo-, X. Delamarre (2008): 55-6.

Belluno
bit.
Βελοῦνον (Beloûnon) ( Ptolemy III, 1, 26, 28), Bellunum ( Pliny, NH , III, 130).
• Originally was probably a compound Bel * (o)-dunum , consisting of the gall. belo-, -looking 'strong, powerful' + dunums 'fortress', 'hill' [cf. Duno (VA)] for GR Isaac * belo- , * good- would rather the value of 'that strikes, that hurts, violent', from the Celts. * nice-no- \u0026lt;ie. * G ʷ ELH- 'hurt, cause pain' [cf. in the. irl. atbail '(he) dies'].
A. Falileyev Bellunum considers "possibly but not necessarily Celtic." According to P.
de Bernardo Stempel, depends on the root * b ʰ el- and has the value of 'shining city'. According to JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, may instead be interpreted as "city of the wolf deified" by the name of 'wolf', derived from the ego. * B ʰ el- (see however Beligna , UD).
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 103; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 10, 112; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 403; A. Falileyev (2007), s. vv. Bellunum , Belounoi , bell- , J. Vendryes (1959 -), sv atbail ; JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 224; Delamarre (2008): 71-2, 154.

Belluno Veronese
bit.
Brentino - Belluno, VR
• Perhaps the corresponding ethnic Belounoi (ancient people settled along the Adige) cited in Ptolemy III, 1, 28: Βελούνων (Beloúnōn). According
A. Falileyev, the ethnic, "if Celtic" can be traced back to the theme of gall. belo-, -looking [for X. Delamarre meaning 'strong, powerful']. See Belluno.
C. Marcato (1990), sv Brentino - Belluno ; GB Pellegrini (1987): 212-3; A. Falileyev (2007), s. vv. Belounoi and Bell -, lovely -, -. belo

Beolo
bit.
Agna, PD; Conselve, PD; Anguillara Veneta, PD; Stanghella, PD
• From lat. birch, betullĕa [probably from a male form betullĕus * (or * betullus ?)] 'Birch' \u0026lt;ie. * g ʷ et-w- ['resin'], from the gall. betua , birch cf. the Paduan biological 'Betula pendula' [\u0026lt;lat. birch], Vicenza BEDOLE 'Betula sp.'.
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 332; JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 229, 234; X. Delamarre (2008): 74.

Bèrici, Monti
oo.
VI
Berua , Beria (epigrafi latine), Feltrini, Tridentini et Beruenses, raetica oppida (Plinio, N. H. , III, 130); Berica (983), loco q. vulgo Berga dicitur [...] porta Bergae (1000), Beriga (1068), Beregam (1212), in Berica (1215), versus Bericam (1262); monte Bericano (1263).
Berici trae origine da Monte Berico ( monte Bericano in the thirteenth century.), and the name of the hill district of Vicenza, which is connected with the claims medieval Berica , Bereg, which correspond to " Berga, the name of a neighborhood in the metro area still call Borgo di Vicenza Berga , which is documented in 1460 (Oliver 1961, 29).
Berica through a form * Ber (u) ica, perhaps an adjective in-ic (agreed with a feminine noun, " urbs or civitas ') could arise from Poleon. a. Beru , known by some Latin inscriptions (da Feltre, Third at Aquileia, Trajan's Forum) and ethnicity. Beruenses quoted by Pliny, but "location uncertain." For
AL Prosdocimi however, a "topographical identity" between Beru and Berga is difficult "because of the location of Pliny (with partial confirmation of the inscriptions): a Roman curing at Vicenza is implausible but not impossible" . We should assume then that there were "at least two * beru ": the Rhaetian mentioned by Pliny and a second Beru at Vicenza, whose name, however, presenting a b- , it would seem "probabilistically" not venetico. As reported
GB Pellegrini, A. Zamboni [ Beru, in "our Aquileia" XLV-XLVI (1974-1975), coll. 83-98] indeed suggested that Beru both be traced to the root ie. * bher- [/ * Bhor-] 'shake vigorously bubbling' ('with reference to a source or thermal waters), and should be attributed to the Gaulish on the basis of "the phonetic evolution of -bh' [ie. bh-> gall. b-, f-venetico ]. You can then compare
Beru with the NP of origin celt. Beruus , Beruius from celt. * beru- , * beru- 'source, fountain', a base ie. * bher (u) - 'source' (see the 'a. irl. bir ' water source ').
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 306-7; GB Pellegrini (1991): 74; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 405; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 73.

Biliera
bit.
Gruaro, VE
• "Voice from the obscure meaning, handed down only by sommarione Napoleon" (1810) [cf. the web address http://digilander.libero.it/gruppo1606/3DiTerre.pdf]. According
C. Marcato comes perhaps from the gall. * ball 'tree trunk' (from a form * ball depend French bille 'tree trunk'), from Bili-, bilio- 'tree', cf. in the. irl. bile 'tree of great height, sacred tree' and which NNP Bi (l) lius , Billa, Billia, Billiena .
GB Pellegrini (1987): 394; J. Lacroix (2005): 22, 117-8, X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 75; P.-Y. Lambert (1994): 189.

Borba, Rio
me.
Lorenzago di Cadore, BL
"Just across the border into Cadore. • According
Desinan CC, to be connected with Borvon 'bubbling, boiling' [gall. Boru-, Bormio 'hot spring'].
Desinan CC (2001): 44; X. Delamarre (2008): 82-3.

Bornio
bit.
Ghebbo of Villanova and Lusia, RO
• → Borno , BS.

Borsea
bit.
Soverzene, BL
Borsea corresponds to Belluno Borsea 'Erica carnea' (another form of high-Veneto: brussiéi ), GB Pellegrini believes that resulted from "a gall. Bruscia 'Gestrüpp' ['scrub'] + -Ellus (in pl.). "
voice Bruscia alongside other forms such as burns , abrupt , Brescia, is used in the medieval Latin with the meaning of 'bush, bush', is supposed to date back through a lat. * People Bruscia 'set of growths of suckers', a term gall. * Bruscia 'excrescence, bushes' (by J. Pokorny ego. bhreus- 'break, break, crush').
* Bruscia is connected by some linguists with lat. bruscum 'excrescence Maple' (mentioned by Pliny in NH , XVI, 27), and perhaps the source term celt. (See personal Bruscus and Bruscius registered X. Delamarre, which, however, and P.-Y. Lambert, does not include nor nor bruscum * Bruscia ). Bruscum , presumably, is of Italian origin abrupt 'boil', the ego. French Bruise , broiz 'maple knuckle', the French brosse 'brush' (for the latter there is uncertainty, cf. P. Guiraud). In addition, it is stated in a late Latin fitonimo brūscus 'holly' (\u0026lt;Lat. classic Ruscus), which may derive from the Italian abrupt 'stiff brush' and abrupt 'harsh'.
GB Pellegrini (1983): 62-3; GB Pellegrini (1987): 188; GB Pellegrini (1991): 75; GB Pellegrini (1992): 58, X. Delamarre (2008); Niermayer JF (1993), J. Pokorny (2005): 171, P.-Y. Lambert (1994), J. Degavre (1998); M. Cortelazzo, P. Zolli (1979-1988); A. Ernout, A. Meillet (1985); A. Rey (1992), sv brosse , P. Guiraud (1994).

Braganti
bit.
Boara Pisani, PD
• According to JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, perhaps from the gall. br Iga 'hill, mountain'> 'fortress' [from * -robbers 'eminent high', cf. br Iga \u0026lt;* bhr̥ĝhā 'mountain stronghold' \u0026lt;* bherĝh- 'high', cf. Breganze ].
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 229; X. Delamarre (2008): 86-7.

BRAGONZI
bit.?
VI
• From NP Bragontius (GB Pellegrini). According to JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, perhaps from the gall. br Iga 'hill, mountain'> 'fortress'. → Braganti .
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 229.

Breganze
bit.
VI
Burganzo (1013; correspondence is not secure), Briganti [1091; in GB Pellegrini (1990b)], Braganti [1091; in C. Marcato (1990)], Breganze (1175), castrum de Braganciis (1250).
• According to D. Olivieri, 'a female personal name (Celtic?) * Briganti to compare with other ancient names of the type Briganti, Briganti in Celtic areas. "
corresponds to the Celts. Briganti, theonym, poleonimo (current Bragança, Portugal) and also the name of many rivers, from bandits * - 'eminent high' (\u0026lt;IE. bherĝh- * 'top'), cf. the corona. Brianza (MB, CO, LC).
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 110; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 122; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 87.

Bregonzi
bit.
Brogliano, VI
• According to JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, perhaps from the gall. br Iga 'hill, mountain'> 'fortress'. → Braganti .
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 229.

Bregonze
oo.
VI
Hills. • To
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, perhaps from the gall. br Iga 'hill, mountain'> 'fortress'. → Braganti .
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 229.

Brentino
bit.
Brentino Belluno, VR
Dial. Brentina . Perhaps this corresponds to the name a. Bretina , mentioned by Ptolemy.
Βρέτηνα, var. Βρέτινα (Bretenière, Brétina) (Ptolemy III, 1, 28).
• It has been associated with brenta , Brento 'tub, trough' (A. Meadows),
"If Celtic," Bretina could derive from * Bret (t) o- \u0026lt; * brit (t) o- 'opinion, thought' (\u0026lt;IE. * b ʰ er- 'lead'), cf. NNP which Britus , Brittus , Brittiae and A. irl. breth , brith 'act of wearing; opinion' (A. Falileyev).
C. Marcato (1990); A. Falileyev (2007), s. vv. Bretina , Bret (t) o-, brit (t) o-, X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 88-9.

Bricol
bit.
Cencenighe Agordino, BL
• According to JB Trumper, MT Vigolo from brucus 'heather' [Gallo-Roman forms grazing * / * brucus \u0026lt;gall. uroica ] \u0026lt;ie. * Eiko-wer- \u0026lt;* Wergeland ʰ - [* wer-eik- / * wer-ei GH ]. Cfr. l'a. irl. froích , fróech , il cimr. grug \u0026lt;Celt. * wroiko-; il br. use \u0026lt; brūca .
JB Trumper, MT Vigolo (1998): 227, 234; X. Delamarre (2008): 91, 328th

Brìcole
VI
?
• JB Trumper, MT Vigolo ritengono Bricole di origine Celt., Ma non ne l'indicano Etimos. Forse va ricondotto all '"IEW 166.2 * b ʰ reg [ * b ʰ reg-]> * Briko-> CIMR., Bret. brig [CIMR. (S br.) brig 'top', from IE. * bhreĝ-, with short vowel], perhaps with Brikka * variant-> REW 1293 * jug-VI tory, sbrico 'rough terrain' (as Geonim brig = 'top / top'). "
Perhaps, instead, aprīcu 'open' (see Pellegrini GB).
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 229, 237, GB Pellegrini (1990b): 237.

Bricon, Val
me.
Revine Lake, TV
• According to JB Trumper, MT Vigolo from brucus 'heather'. → Bricol .
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 227.

Broil
bit.
Tambre, BL
Broil (which corresponds to Italian brolo 'vegetable garden, orchard'), comes from the gall. * brogilos 'small area'> 'enclosed wood', diminutive of * Brogi- 'Territory, region, border, make' (\u0026lt;* mrogi-). See Brolo (Nonius, VB).
GB Pellegrini (1987): 368; P.-Y. Lambert (1994): 190; X. Delamarre (2008): 91.

Brondolo
bit.
Chioggia, VE
Portum Brundulum (Pliny, NH , III, 121).
Brondolo derives from the Latin. Brundulum , which was "related to the name of deer species of branching sub" (with reference to a branched structure of the mouth) has run traced back to the topic ie. * bhren-to- 'deer', from * bhren- 'stick out' (J. Pokorny), a base or "Mediterranean" (G. Alessio). AL Prosdocimi instead suggests a formation * bhrondh O-lo- '= mouth that slides forward' (from the root-* bhrendh also significant 'result, move forward'), whose Celtic would be proved by the passage ie. * bh-> b- .
Prosdocimi AL (1988): 392; J. Pokorny (2005): 167-9.

Cadola
bit.
Bridge in the Alps, BL
at municipal Bridge in Alp i.
hill in actum inter pausatorio pontem Polpet et de plebem Cadula (1181), de Plebem Cadula capellis cum suis, de pontem Meatballs ripis cum suis et pedagiis (1185) (F. Pellegrini).
Cadola perhaps derived from NP lat. Catulus , Catulus \u0026lt; catŭlus 'small animal', especially dog \u200b\u200band cat, and Catulus 'dog', or a gall. * Catulus from Catu- 'fight, battle', cf. the NNP Catulus (With suff. agentive-the-) Catus, Catullus.
C. Marcato (1990), sv Ponte nelle Alpi, A. Ernout, A. Meillet (1985), sv catulus , X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 110-1.

Cadore
co.
BL
localized "in the current Monte Ricco above Pieve di Cadore.
Cadubrium (923), Catubria (974); ETN. a. Catubrīni 'Cadorini' (registration).
• From a compound * Catu-br I (g) um from gall. Catu- 'battle' + * -brigum , trouble- 'mountain stronghold', ie one. * bhr̥ĝhā [from the root-* bherĝh 'high'], with the overall meaning of 'hill of battle' or 'stronghold' (to see. Irl. cath 'battle' and States' hill '). The first element Catu- can also identify a personal Catus (documented by three entries), in which case the original name is true 'rock of (a) Catus '.
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 104; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 10, 114; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 404-5; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 86-7, 110-1.

Caldogno
bit.
VI
Caldonius (1046), de Caldonia (1183).
• According to C. Marcato, "seems to reflect an element name day, probably late antique Latin or, if, as seems, you can call up a form similar to that of the first certificate" placed next to the name of the gens Caldina , documented in Venetia .
Caldonius can be explained by a gall. * Caledonius : cf. the NNP Caletonius , Caledonia, Caleta , caled , Caletus , caled , Caledu (and the corona. Calidonia 'Land of Caledonians'), from the base keyed (or ) - 'hard'.
C. Marcato (1990); X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 97-8.

Calvene
bit.
VI
Calvenum quoque plebem (1034), de Calvenna (1091), plebis S. Marie de Calvennis (1297).
• According to D. Olivieri, a NP Calvene 'classic latin' (C. Mark). It could be a Calvenus of Celtic origin, from gall basis. * Calu-, from which even the NNP Calus , Caludus , Calventus .
C. Marcato (1990); X. Delamarre (2007).

Fields Raud
bit. Location
the defeat of the Cimbri by the Romans (101 BC). It was located at Vercelli, or between Ferrara and Rovigo (see E. Gabba, The conquest of Gaul , in Aa. Vv., History of Rome, Vol II, Torino 1990, p. 77).
Campis in quibus nomen erat Raudiis (Patercolo Velleius, II, 12, 5).
• It is probably a name of Celtic origin. meaning 'Red Field', with Raud Latin form (or presenting the exchange au / ou Gallic detected in other words, cf. eg. Ossimo , BS) dating back to the gall. roud- [celt. * Roud- 'red' (a. irl Ruad ), the ego. * roudho-], cf. First of all, the NNP rauda , Raudo-maeus , Roudius .
GB Pellegrini (1987): 108-9; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 119-20; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 262.

Cavaso Tomb of
bit.
TV
Dial. cavas .
spot Capati (780), de Cavaso (1076), de Cavaso (1152). • From
NP lat. Capatius (W. Schulze), through the sequence * Capatio > Cabatjo > Caba ʃio > Cavaso > Cava ʃo > Cavas (L. Melcher).
Capatius is probably of Celtic origin (by X. Delamarre is inserted between the personal celt.).
C. Marcato (1990); X. Delamarre (2007).

Combai
bit.
Miane, TV
Combai you back to the gall. Cumba 'cavity, valley'.
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 176; JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 227; X. Delamarre (2008): 131.

Gavello
bit.
RO, Mirandola, MO; Bondeno FE
• To C. Marked Gavello dates back to an entry pre-Latin * gava / * gaba 'canyon', 'stream' (and similar) (J. Hubschmid), rather than gall. * Gabel- 'fork'. But for the Po Delta - and the Po, in the case of the two fractions of the same name - are more plausible toponymic training related to components of the geographical areas of river valley, which branches, bifurcations , islets. See also Gabellus , ancient name of the river Secchia (Pliny, NH , III, 118.), Which according A. Falileyev derives from -Gabal (perhaps in the variant * Gabel-) form Latz. (Along with gabulum ) of gall. * gable- 'gallows', cf. in the. irl. gabul the CIMR. gafl , to the. br. Gabl 'gallows', all from * gablos . I see. Gabellus (Emilia, Lombardy) and Trigáboloi (FE).
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 161; A. Falileyev (2007), sv Gabellus fl. , X. Delamarre (2008): 172.

Glazenéi, The
bit.
Livinallongo, BL
• According GB Pellegrini Glazenei is due to the Celts. * glasina 'blueberry'. See Friulian glàsigne , glàsime , glàsine , Ladin glèsena , the Venetian giàsena [cf. http://books.google.it/books?id=dNUhkUFVdrgC&q=glasina the web address # v = snippet & q = glasina & f = false].
The gall. * glasina is "akin to the source glastum " lat voice. the gall. * Glaston , * Glasson 'ford' (from an original meaning 'blue-green', cf. To the. Irl glas 'blue-green', br. glas 'green, blue, pale gray'); or derived from prelat. * Alisa 'alder', through a form * to (i) sina , -inus (M. Pfister). The
ford is a herbaceous plant (Isatis tinctoria ), from whose leaves and roots out a blue dye (called lat. also vitrum , hence the value of 'glass').
GB Pellegrini (1987): 120; G. B. Pellegrini (1990b): 129; Pirona GA (1988): 386; X. Delamarre (2008): 179-80; M. Cortelazzo, C. Marcato (2005), sv giàṡena .

Graonetto
bit.
Hanno Veneto, VE
• From lat. [People] burden 'gravel area'. Grave → .
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 183.

Gravazzo
bit.
Sant'Anna d'Alfaedo, VR
• From prelat. burden 'gravel area'. See Gravazzo (Breonio, Fumane, VR) and Grave .

Gravazzo
bit.
Breonio, Fumane, VR
• From lat. [People] burden 'gravel area'. Grave → .
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 183.

Grave
bit.
Cencenighe BL, Fadalto, Vittorio Veneto, TV.
• From lat. [People] burden 'gravel area' (Latin medieval burden ) \u0026lt;gall. * grau 'sand, gravel' \u0026lt;* grou , perhaps by the ego. * ghreu -'crush, crush', cf. br. gro , Groa 'cordon of pebbles (or sand)', the CIMR. gro 'gravel', in the. irl. grian 'gravel', irl. grean . For E. But Campanile * burden would be a prehistoric item. and O. Bloch and W. von Wartburg is not Celtic.
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 183; P.-Y. Lambert (1994): 195; Delamarre (2008): 183.

Gravona
me.
Cordignano, TV
Torrente. • From
prelat. burden 'gravel area'. Grave → .
G. Frau (1978); GB Pellegrini (1990b): 183; Desinan CC (2001): 45.

Gronéa
bit.
Cologna Veneta, VR
• According GB Pellegrini, Gronea back to lat. [People] burden 'gravel area'. Grave → .
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 183.

Gronell
bit.
Malo, VI
• Second GB Pellegrini, from Lat. [People] burden 'gravel area'. Grave → .
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 183.

Gruaro
bit.
VE
Dial. Gruer.
Vuarnerius de Gruaro (1134), de Groario (1140), Groharium (1182), de Gruaro (1186), de Gruwar (1191), Growario (XII century).
• Named crane (Grus lat.) + the suff. collective- Arius (D. Oliver) or from the lat. Medieval gruarius 'guardian of the forest'.
Much brobabilmente from prelat. burden 'gravel ghiareto' or 'alluvial'. Gruaro can be interpreted as a ( campus, locus, or other masculine noun) gruarius \u0026lt;* gro (v) arius [ or g (a) uarius ] \u0026lt;* gravarius cf. Friulian Gruaro 'high place of the field, gravel and unproductive'. According to PC
Begotti, derives from the Latin. Late Antique and Medieval gro (v) 'Marshy land', 'sandy soil', a pre-Roman * grob (see http://digilander.libero.it/gruppo1606/3DiTerre.pdf ).
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 394; Niermayer JF (1993); Pirona GA (1988): 406.

Lea, range
Melara di Sacco (?), PD
in Campo de Lea (1130).
• Matches the Venetian lea , detrimental 'mud, silt, sludge, liquid layer of fat on' (see also Friulian detrimental 'gravel very minute'), by a voice Pre-Roman * Ligita for G. Frau Gallic.
X. Delamarre, in fact, does not accept * Ligita in his dictionary, and reports the gall. * liga \u0026lt;* alloy ('layer, bottom deposit'>) 'scum, mud, silt', compared with the derivative CIMR. llaid 'limus, lutum, coenum' (* legto-), br. lec'hit 'any other liquid water and sediment, mud, slime, scum' (* leg-s-), all from the root ie. * legh -'lie down, lie down'. * From liga addition, through a form * Gallo-Roman lia, follows the French lie 'scum'.
J. Degavre Ligita approaches to AI. irl. legaim '(I) I undo', the CIMR. llaith 'wet', br. Leiza 'wet' [\u0026lt;br. leizh , a. br. Leid \u0026lt;celt. * leg-to-, according to A. Deshayes], to br. lec'hid 'silt' and decided that it derived from the rad. ie. * -leg 'falling drip, drip, melt'. For A. But Deshayes br. lec'hid (a. br. leh 'deposit silt') and CIMR. llaid 'mud' would result from britt. * Latio-, similar to the gall. * -sides 'swamp' (see Arlate , Calco, LC) and AI. irl. Laith 'swamp drink', irl. lathach 'mud, mire', all of a rad. ie. * Lat- 'humid swamp, bog' (see J. Pokorny).
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 187-8; JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 238; M. Cortelazzo, C. Marcato (2005), sv detrimental , G. Frau (1978); Pirona GA (1988): 512; Delamarre (2008): 201, 196-7, J. Degavre (1998); A. Deshayes (2003), J. Pokorny (2005).

Lemene
me.
PN, VE
Lemina (888), Lemen (996, 1140).
Lemene perhaps derives from the Latin. limina , sing. limen 'threshold limit' (REW 5047 limen 'threshold'). The shape Lemene seems built on voice limit (intersection with limen limes 'border') (GB Pellegrini).
F. Crevatin it approaches the top. Istrian Leme ( canal of ), for which he suggested a possible derivation from the outset- * / limen-, basic "old European".
GB Pellegrini (1987): 382; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 222; F. Crevatin (1991): 71.

Lia
me.
Oderzo, TV
• Maybe * Ligita . → Lea, range.
GB Pellegrini (1990b): 187-8.

Limun
Monselice, PD
Limun de Campo (1160). • From
noble venetico Lemōnius , or from the base of gall. silt- [ lemo -, silt -] 'elm', to see. with Limone sul Garda (BS) ["I". Lemene ], or even lim- 'mud', cf. French limon [\u0026lt;lat. * People silt, limōnis \u0026lt;classic līmus 'mud'].
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 231; X. Delamarre (2008): 198; A. Rey (1992), sv limon.

Lusia
bit.
Barbona, PD
• → Lusia (RO).

Lusia
bit.
RO
• From noble lat. Lusius .
Lusius , Lusia (along with Lusella , Lusones and Lusidiena ) are also names of Gallic origin, deriving from a base * lus (i) - , combined with Joshua - , louse- ( Lauso-), cf. the NNP Lausus , Lousios , Lousucus e il toponimo Lausonna > Losanna (X. Delamarre). Secondo alcuni Lausonna deriverebbe però dal gall. * lausā , cfr. l’oo. Lùsia (Moena, TN).
C. Marcato (1990); X. Delamarre (2007); P.-Y. Lambert (1994): 196.

Malamocco
po.
Venezia
Maio Meduaco ( Tabula Peutingeriana , IV, 5); Mathamauci (gen.; 840); νήσου τοῦ Μεδαμαῦκου (Nḗsou Medamaũkou tou) (Constantine Porphyrogenitus) Methamauco (967, 978-9, 983, 979-991), Methamaucho , Mathemauco (979-991); Metamaucenses (967). • To
GB Pellegrini comes from Meduacus , as a. the Brenta through But (I)-medoc > Mademoc- (for dissimilation)> Malamocco (substituted d> l ) (D. Oliver) is ruled out the etymon μετὰ Μεδόακον (half Medóakon) proposed by V. Bellemo and taken up by W. Dorigo. According
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, Malamocco dates back to a celt. medu-acos from * medu- 'mead' (instead of * med- 'half'), through the forms Mai (or) Meduācus [Pliny, NH , III, 121: Meduaci duo ]> * Mamadauco / * Mamedauco > Madamauco (949), Metamauco (967)> * Meamoco / * Maamoco . → I. Medoacus, Meduacus .
GB Pellegrini (1987): 144; GB Pellegrini (1998): 171; R. Cease (1991); W. Dorigo (1983): 80; JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 228-9.

Medoacus, Meduacus
me.
ancient name of the Brenta and Bacchiglione ( Meduacus Maior and Minor of ancient sources).
Μεδόακος (Medóakos) (Strabo, V, 1, 7), Meduaci duo (Pliny, NH , III, 121). • According to AL
Prosdocimi from celt. * medhu- (ie. * medhu-) 'medium' (used in compounds and especially in Meduana flumen , cf. the ego. Meduna, PN) + -ak ʷ - 'water', with -k ʷ - > -k- "for unlike the previous u '. Is no possibility of a derivation from * medhu- 'honey', whereas X. Delamarre proposes the etymology medu 'mead', 'drunk'? both Meduacus that Meduana > The Mayenne. A. Falileyev believes that Meduacus derived from the Celts. medu-, but would not reflect the meaning. → Malamocco .
Prosdocimi AL (1988): 392-3; X. Delamarre (2008): 221; A. Falileyev (2007).

Milies
bit.
Segusino, TV
• From Miliasiu * o * Miliaisu from NP lat. Aemilius [ Milius ] or Mellius oppre by milium 'mile' (GB Pellegrini); for JB Trumper, MT Vigolo it would be a * Aemilia-āsius with forming celt. -āsius .
Mellius is probably a variant of Melius (from Melius comparative bonus?), But might be of Gallic origin: cf. the NNP Melus , Melius, Melluso , from apple- , Melio-. We can not completely exclude a Milius of Celtic origin., Given the existence of gall NNP. which Mila , Milio, Milo, from the base mil (o) - cf. in the. irl. m the , CIMR. br. mil 'animal, small animal'.
GB Pellegrini (1987): 42; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 308; M.-T. Morlet (1985); JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 227; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 226.

Nanto
bit.
VI
Ecclesia de Nanto (1297). • From
gall. (Maybe even venetico) NANTU 'downstream recess', and 'channel, furrow, ditch', cf. The Savoy Nant , Savoy nor 'stream', and Cava- nantolo (1176, Sacco, PD). For E. However, dates back to the Germanic NP Gamillscheg Nantha , cf. the word Gothic nanthian 'dare'.
It brings
likely to gall. NANTU-, Nant- 'valley, stream' ( Nanto 'downstream' of Glossary Vienna), cf. the idron. French Nan (t) (Isère, Jura, Ain, Meuse, Ardèche) and Poleon. Nant (Aveyron, Meuse), the CIMR. Nant 'valley, stream', the br. Nant 'valley' (the ego. * nem- 'bend, incline' or rather * (s) na- 'swim' + the suff. Participial -nt-, with the meaning of 'river').
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 82, 209; X. Delamarre (2008): 230-1.

Nanto, Forest, Mount; Bridge
bit.
Nanto, VI
• → Nanto .
GB Pellegrini (1987): 209.

Omblaréi
bit.
Livinallongo, BL
• GB Pellegrini thinks Omblarei goes back "to fitonimo Amblie 'Alnus viridis' ['green alder', believed to be] of Celtic origin, akin to amb (i) latium (The FEW , 83-84) " and mentioned in the LEI under the heading pre-Roman * -amp / * amb- 'alder'. Amblie , along with Ambri , amp, is a term used in meat, and is reflected "in the names comelicani alder anpiadés 'alder of the hill'."
voice lat. Medieval amb (i) latium comes from a gall. * ambilation , which, however, X. Delamarre, based on the continuations of romances, do not assign a value fitonimico, but to 'ring for yoke'. From
prelat. * -amp / * amb- - the LEI distinguishes between two pairs of roots * amp -, * amb - from the first would follow "derivative novels designating the 'raspberry', 'the second' names Venetian-Friulian Ladin and alder '- han originated several names Alpine North East, including the corona. Ampezzo (BL), and perhaps AMBIEZ (Val d'Ambiez and Cima, TN). In
Glossary Vienna is then recorded a late entry gall. Ambe 'revolutionary' (along with inter Ambesi 'inter rivos') from which they could depend on some names, especially hydronyms (eg AMBIEZ , TN).
GB Pellegrini (1987): 120; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 129; Pirona GA (1988): 11; J. Lacroix (2005): 28; MT Vigouroux, P. Barbierato (2007); C. Marcato (1990), sv Ampezzo, X. Delamarre (2008): 42, 41.

Omblé
bit.
Livinallongo, BL
• → Omblaréi .

Pedevenda
co.
PD
hilly area.
'round Places in Venda. "
in Pedevenda (1153, 1236, 1267) (http://books.google.it/books?id=NMs3AAAAcAAJ&pg =).
• According to JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, is connected with oron. Venda and Vendevolo from celt. * Windo- 'beautiful, lucky, lucky' [gall. -vindo 'white, shining, sacred']. Pedevenda should mean 'at the foot of Monte Venda'.
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 230; X. Delamarre (2008): 319-20.

Rea
bit.
(Pove del Grappa?) VI
Rea probably be compared with the Veronese Reda, Rea, from * heir 'path, track', and the reaction Canavese 'grassy ridge of the mountain' (D. Oliver), cf. Rea, PV. For
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux, it can be brought to the Gallo-Roman ratis [gall. ratis ] 'fern' (but 'the Venetian does not know the palatalization of / a / if not in-forming Arius'), or, rather, to lat. Raeda = reda [gall. Latz. reda 'four wheel'; cf. Ivrea, TO] (\u0026lt;IE. * Reidh- 'riding').
C. Marcato (1990), sv Rea, JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 230; Delamarre (2008): 253, 254-5.

REGHENA
me.
PN, VE
Regena (996), aqua Regan (1278).
Reghena presumably derives from pre-Roman * item 'stream' (A. Meadows). According to GB Pellegrini is a name similar to Recon 'channel dug in the valleys iscolo of water 'and low Lombard Regona ' land subject to flooding, marshy ground ', from pre-Roman item , rica ' stream '.
* item could match the gall. rica 'groove' (\u0026lt;IE. pr̥kā *), from which stem the gloss late Lat. and A line. Provencal rega 'groove' cf. in the. br. rec 'groove, tear' (\u0026lt;* rika), the average CIMR. rych 'groove' (\u0026lt;* Rikki-). It would be plausible semantic evolution 'groove'> 'channel'> 'stream' (JB Trumper, MT Vigolo).
G. Frau (1978); GB Pellegrini (1987): 382; JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 225; J. Lacroix (2005): 30-1; X. Delamarre (2008): 256.

Ren
bit.
Gosaldo, BL
• Maybe is the Cadore ren, rin 'river, stream' \u0026lt;gall. * rhino- \u0026lt;* reino- \u0026lt;ie. * rei-'flow'. See idron. Rin .
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 226; X. Delamarre (2008): 256.

Rin
me.
Lozzo di Cadore, BL, S. Pietro di Cadore, BL
Commonly rio Rin.
• hydronym that corresponds with the little Cadore rin 'river, stream', a theme gall. * rhino- \u0026lt;* reino-, formed on the root ie. * rei-'flow'. See also at. French rin 'stream' el'idron. Reno (Tuscany, Emilia).
GB Pellegrini (1987): 109; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 120, 369; JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 226; X. Delamarre (2008): 256.

Segusino
bit.
TV
in Secusino caxale unum (1168), ipsam Terram ecclesie S. Lucie de Segusino (1259).
• ethnicity. Segusīnus of Poleon. a. Seguso, Segusium , Segusii [→ Susa, TO] (G. Alessio), or, D. Olivieri, the NP * Segusius , "Probable on the basis of Sedusius [?], or even a compound with sub- 'under'.
Segusii and * Segusius derived from the gall. tallow- 'strength, vigor and victory' \u0026lt;ie. * -saws 'submit, win'.
C. Marcato (1990); X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 268-9.

Socal
bit.
Tarzo, TV
• From Gallo soccus [lat. Medieval soccus , succus , socus 'ploughshare'], comparable with CIMR. hwch 'sow', swch 'groove', 'slut' \u0026lt;* su-KKA (JB Trumper, MT Vigolo). The CIMR. hwch meaning 'sow' (and old-fashioned 'pork') comes from the Celts. * Sukka-; swch 'tip, ploughshare' derives from the Latin. soccus (A. Falileyev). See the gall. * juice- 'pig snout'> 'plow' and A. irl. Socc 'snout' and 'ploughshare'.
JB Trumper, MT Vigouroux (1998): 227; JF Niermayer (1993); A. Falileyev (2000): 87, 144; X. Delamarre (2008): 284.

Tagliamento
io.
Veneto, Friuli
Τιλαουέντου (Tilaouéntou) (Tolomeo, III, 1, 22), Tiliaventum (Plinio, N. H. , III, 126), Fl. Tiliabinte ( Tabula Peutingeriana , IV, 5), Teliamenti (Venanzio Fortunato, Vita sancti Martini , IV, 655), Tiliamenti (Paolo Diacono, II, 13), Taliamentum ( Cosmografia ravennate , IV, 36); Taliamentum (802), in Flumini Tilavempti (1029), super ripam Tulmenti (1210), Taiamento (1300 AC).
• It is connected by A. Karg a prelat. telia 'lime', comparable to the lat. tilia (must be excluded from the comparison to. Irl. teile 'lime', which is rather late dall'ingl loan. Teyla -tree, taken in turn from the ego. teil French) .
G. Frau assume that it's based on a * tilia celt. or precelt., while the name would be "of Celtic origin, because of -V- spent -m-'in the suffix - GB Pellegrini speaks rather of "the alternation b , v / m appears clearly from the ancient sources, attributed to Celtic."
AL Prosdocimi gives the suff. -vent- source ie. and the meaning of 'rich': it would be akin to the greek-εντ-(-ent-) and the Sanskrit -vant-, alternating with -mant- "according to the preceding phonetic." This causes the student to think that the alternation v / m documented for idron., May be much older age first statement (when it appears that "the version with -m-'in Teliamenti Venantius Fortunato, in 500 dCca).
C. Marcato (1990); G. Frau (1978); GB Pellegrini (1987): 379; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 393; J. Vendryes (1959 -).

Tartarus
me.
VR, MN, RO
Tartarus is formally equal to the name of one of the seven ports (host ) of the Po delta, mentioned by Pliny: host Carbonaria plena, Fossiones ac Philistine, quod alii Tartarum vocant ( NH, III, 121).
is reduced to the Gallic theme taro- 'crossing' (see me. Taro , PR). Do not ruled out a connection with the gall. tartos 'dry', ie from the root. * ters-'dry'. See NNP Tartos , Tartus.
A. Garancini Costanzo (1975): 13; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 290.

Tarzo
bit.
TV
Dial. tarθ .
Tarco (1031), Tarco (1397), Tarco (1476).
• It is a noble form asuffissale from lat. Tartius or Tarcius (W. Schulze, GB Pellegrini, AL Prosdocimi). In the Tarco - and is configured as voice support, like a * Ries > Riese ( Riese Pio X, TV).
Tartius is probably of Celtic origin. From gall. tartaric 'dry, thirsty (by dry throat),' base from which even the NNP Tartos , Tartus, Tart , Tartonius . Tarcius is perhaps a contracted form of Taricius from NP gall. rius, of taro- , Tario- 'crossing' or -taro ( Taru-, tauro-) 'bull'.
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 16, 55, GB Pellegrini (1990b): 326; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 290-1; M.-T. Morlet (1985).

Tau
me.
Portsmouth, VE
Taugo (996), villa in Tanuchi , Tanugi ("Error reading Tauu -'; 1255), Tawolco ('false reconstruction', 1270), in moat Tavuch (1278).
• GB Pellegrini thinks that the base could be the "theme dell'idronimo Tagus certainly very old, which seems to allude to" mud ", compared with a. French tai 'mud', 'perhaps from a pre-Latin * contagion "[but of Germanic origin AJ Greimas]. Applied to that issue there would be suff. celt. -UCU [-UCO-] 'parallel- ako , -iko , -oko' recognizable * in Ausucum > Ausugo [→ Ausugum (TN)], where the outcome -ucum > -ugo would be similar to that attested to Tau , namely -ucum > -ugo (> -uk). The
hydronym however, could be connected with the theme celt. tauo -(\u0026lt;* Taus-) 'quiet, quiet'.
GB Pellegrini (1987): 380-1; Greimas AJ (1992); X. Delamarre (2008): 292.

Tezze sul Brenta
bit.
VI
Locally téʒʒe ; dial. the German .
• According to D. Olivieri, the Venetian teʒa , teʃa 'shed, barn,' from Lat. attitude 'hut' ['Gallic passed to the Latin word', a gall. * ad-strategy ].
Teʒa , teʃa rather is due, according to X. Delamarre, the gall. * strategy 'hut', from the root * teg- 'cover' \u0026lt;ie. * (s) teg- 'id.'; cf. all with the meaning of 'home' to the. irl. teg, in the. CIMR. and Others br. tig.
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1990b): 209; X. Delamarre (2008): 59-60.

Togisonus
me.
For Pliny the Togisonus ran campaigns in Padua.
Matches perhaps Gorzone-Ash Guà (R. Chevallier).
Togisono (Togisoro) ex Patavinorum AGRIS (Pliny, NH , III, 121).
Prosdocimi • According to AL, the hydronym could be traced back to a theme * tokso -'corresponding to lat. taxus '[' rate (tree) '], with an evolution -ks-> -gs-> -gis- and' enlargement-is- 'peculiarly Venetian el ' -on-final which is found in other Venetian hydronyms (see eg. Muson Old , VE and PD).
X. Delamarre feel rather Togi-sonus a compound for which a theme celt. Togi- ('' oath'?»), which also NNP which Togi-dubnus , Togi-Marus , Togius , Togia . Other names in * Togi- however, including -rix Togi, Togi- uepus , Togidius , would be formed on another Togi-, derived from this tough, tough- 'ax' or 'arc' through 'or reduction of the diphthong (in unstressed position after P. de Bernardo Stempel Fs Evans 24).
As regards the second part -sonus , Delamarre gives no indication. In fact, the etymology that can not seem to offer much more than appropriate for a hydronym: a derivation from the gall theme. am- \u0026lt; Sounio- 'sleep, dream', or by sleep- , Sunni 'sun', or even a confrontation with the br. sonn 'right, standing, rigid, firm, solid' ('of uncertain etymology), an association perhaps AI. irl. sonn 'violent'.
R. Chevallier (1988): 149, 177; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 390; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 298, 279, 277-8; A. Deshayes (2003): 677; J. Vendryes (1959 -), sv sonn (2).

Treviso
bit.
Ταρβίσιον (Tarbísion) (Procopio, De Bello Gothico , II, 29; III, 1-2), Tarvīsus (Venanzio Fortunato, Vita s. Martini , IV, 665), Tarbision , Tribicium seu Tarbision ( Cosmografia ravennate , IV, 30 e 31), de Tarvisio , aput Tarvisium (Paolo Diacono, III, 26; IV,3), Tarvisio , Tarvisus , Tarvisium (iscrizioni latine); etn. ex montibus Tarvisanis (Plinio, N. H. , 126).
• Continua il lat. Tarvisium , Tarviso- , dal gall. (And / or Venetian) Taru- 'bull' + the suff. -is-me- (with -is- also attributable to the Veneto), cf. Tarvisio, UD.
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 97; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 106; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 401-2; A. Falileyev (2007), sv Tarvisium , X. Delamarre (2008): 290-1.

Venda, Monte
oo.
PD
Highest Hills Hills. •
is generally attributed to the gall. vindos 'white' ('brilliant', 'beautiful', 'Happy'), but without excluding the possibility of a common isolessi the Gallic and the Veneto, or even a loan from first to second (MP Marquis, GB Pellegrini) - it seems less likely attribution dell'oronimo Gauls who settled permanently in in the area.
GB Pellegrini (1983): 62; GB Pellegrini (1987): 96; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 105; GB Pellegrini (1991): 74-5; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 241; X. Delamarre (2008): 319-20.

Vendevolo, Monte
oo.
PD
Vendevolo can perhaps be traced to a compound * vindupala (MP Marquis) * vindu-or post- (AL Prosdocimi), the celt. -vindo 'white' + element * -pole- / * shovel 'stone, rock' (a base * pal- in Liguria and Leponzi); training therefore similar to (Celtic- ) ligure Vindu shovel '(stream) that has white pebbles' (D. May), the table Polcevera (9): ex riuo Vindupale , in riuo Vendupale . → oron. Venda, Monte .
GB Pellegrini (1983): 62; GB Pellegrini (1987): 96; GB Pellegrini (1990b): 105; A. L. Prosdocimi (1988): 241; G. Petracco Sicardi (1981): 75-6; G. Petracco Sicardi, R. Caprini (1981): 81; D. Maggi (1983): 58; X. Delamarre (2008): 319-20.

Verona
po.
Benacus inter Brixiam et Veronam (Virgilio, georg. , II, 60), Verona Atesi circumflua (Silio Italico, VIII, 595), Οὐήρωνος, Οὐηρώνος (Ouḗrōnos, Ouērṓnos) (Strabone, VI, 206), Οὐήρον (Ouḗron) (Strabone, V, 213), Verona , Veronam (Pliny, NH , 130, 132). • Continuation of
Poleon. lat. Verona, "the source far from certain," formed with the suff. -Ona present in other pre-Latin names. Has run a supposed derivation from the Etruscan veru , verona probably NP (W. Schulze), cf. some place names called Tuscan Verona or derived forms.
P. de Bernardo Stempel believes instead Verona name of Celtic origin. from * uper-on-a [\u0026lt;gall. * Uer- \u0026lt; * u (p) er- 'super-'] 'The upper city', 'high city'. For X. Delamarre Verona is also NP from uer-, uero- 'super-'.
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1987): 211; F. Benozzo (2002): 261; X. Delamarre (2007); X. Delamarre (2008): 313; A. Falileyev (2007).

Vicenza
bit.
Etn. Veicetinos (enrollment of 135 BC). Vicetia ( Vicentia ) Vicetiam (Pliny, NH , III, 130, 132) Vicetia (Tacitus, Hist . , VIII, 8), Οὐικετία (Ouiketía) (Ptolemy, Geogr . , III, 1, 26).
• From lat. Vicetia ( Vicentia ), probable formation of Venetian origin (similar to Venetia ), the ego. * Weik- 'village', 'clan' ['* Weik- designate the social unit than the family and the village (marked C)] + the suff. -et-, nell'etn also detectable. Veneti. According to AL Prosdocimi, shape Vicentia is probably due to the influence of ancient poleonimi -bodies in ( Faventia , Placentia , Pollentia ...).
P. de Bernardo Stempel (along with A. Falileyev and X. Delamarre) considers, however, the lat. Vicetia of Celtic origin.: * A wik-et-ya [\u0026lt;* UEIK- 'fight', * u̯ink- 'win'] meaning 'the town fighter' ('the combatant' or 'Victory', according to X. Delamarre).
C. Marcato (1990); GB Pellegrini (1990b): 136; Prosdocimi AL (1988): 401; F. Benozzo (2002): 261; A. Falileyev (2007), s. v. Vicetia ; X. Delamarre (2008): 317.

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