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    İçerik akorların, tabların, bas tablarının ve sözlerin ayırt edilebilmesi için seçimlerinize göre renkli listelenmektedir.

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Guest | 14 Mart 2014 saat 12:10

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Guest | 04 Mart 2014 saat 11:14

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Guest | 19 Şubat 2014 saat 11:51

Congrats to all! FYI after lambing, gelnty fondle your ewe's teat and squirt' a little milk (colostrum) out often there's a bit of a waxy plug then help and direct the lamb to mama's teat, sometimes placing the teat in the lamb's mouth. Eventually they get the idea! I've had lamb's up & nursing before mama's done lambing!!!Fun fun fun!

Guest | 18 Şubat 2014 saat 23:42

Hello Phil,Thank you for your interesting coemnmt. I have spoken to someone who knows more about this sort of thing than I do, and he told me that Suilven actually means Pillar Mountain rather than Table Mountain, although of course the two words are a bit interchangeable when it comes to mountains – or so it would seem!It is thought that the name is basically a combination of “sular†being the Norse word for “pillar†and the Gaelic word “beinn†being mountain. The Norse for mountain is “fjall†and I can certainly see a common route between those two words! It is thought that the Gaels put the Gaelic word into the Norse name to make it easier for them. This is probably the most likely explanation of the name. I have heard your “seen from afar†translation before, and that too would make sense because you can see it quite a way out over The Minch, but maybe it doesn't have any linguistic backing. But who can really know for sure as Old Norse (or Norn as it is known in Shetland) is no longer very extant as far as I know. Some people think that the name comes from the Gaelic word for “eye†which is “sf9il†but as a Gaelic name, that doesn't really work! I honestly don't think Viking was ever a language. The Vikings who came round here were from Norway, but in the east of England they were from Denmark. My guess is that they brought their own languages with them.

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