Are there any insights into the etymology of óenach/óenaig aside from being a derivative of óen? And why it became indicative of an assembly? Tagging in @eDIL_Dictionary @ChronHib but perhaps others have some thoughts.
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Bingo. He doesn't actually discuss the etymology of the word, but he says (p. xxxi) that "historical g is preserved ... in §28 oenagh". I may have seen a more explicit discussion elsewhere, but this is fairly unambiguous.
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Thanks! I’ll check that ref myself, it’s worth it for the footnote anyway
End of conversation
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