Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Mr. Colquhoun is really called Dermod, but he would have been far too modest to choose Dermot O'Dyna for his Celtic name, had we not insisted; for this historic personage was not only noble-minded, generous, of untarnished honour, and the bravest of the brave, but he was as handsome as he was gallant, and so much the idol of the ladies that he was sometimes called Dermat-na-man, or Dermot of the women.
Penelope's Irish Experiences Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin 1889
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Photos and blogs posts pertaining to last Thursday's conference at The Helix in Dublin have begun to trickle through on Technorati including some great photos from Dermod Moore and others.
April 2006 2006
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Derek Organ took some great notes from the event and Dermod has a list of some of the the blogheads who were and weren't there.
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Derek Organ took some great notes from the event and Dermod has a list of some of the the blogheads who were and weren't there.
April 2006 2006
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Dermod, sorry about that, I usually do link to permalinks but sometimes I'm too lazy and just link to the domain from memory.
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Photos and blogs posts pertaining to last Thursday's conference at The Helix in Dublin have begun to trickle through on Technorati including some great photos from Dermod Moore and others.
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As a matter of fact his only failings were a young heart and a sense of humour; but, as these qualities were as out of place in the _Randall_ family as a hornpipe at a funeral, _Dermod_ lives under a perpetual cloud of unmerited suspicion.
Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 152, June 6, 1917 Various
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_Flemings_, _Saxons_, and old _Britons_, (being themselves unsettled, and unestablished) acceded to the Fate and Fortunes of _Dermod_, under the
An Essay on the Antient and Modern State of Ireland Henry Brooke
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Great was the deed that was done in Ireland this day, the kalends of August (1166) -- Dermod, son of Donnoch macMurrogh, King of Leinster and of the (Dublin) Danes to be banished by the men of Ireland over the sea eastwards.
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"But," Dermod continued, "when we see a woman driving a chariot of two horses, then we are amazed indeed."
Irish Fairy Tales James Stephens 1916
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