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According to the '''Oxford English Dictionary''', ''naggin'' is a variant of ''noggin'', a word of uncertain origin recorded from the seventeenth century and meaning a small quantity of alcohol, usually one gill (0.25 imperial pints (140 mL)). Tomás S. Ó Máille derives it from the Irish ''naigín'', ''cnaigín'', a small wooden pail with a capacity of two glasses. It has generally been used in more modern times in reference to a smallish glass container, suitable, for example of sequestering in a hip or coat pocket.  
According to the '''Oxford English Dictionary''', ''naggin'' is a variant of ''noggin'', a word of uncertain origin recorded from the seventeenth century and meaning a small quantity of alcohol, usually one gill (0.25 imperial pints (140 mL)). Tomás S. Ó Máille derives it from the Irish ''naigín'', ''cnaigín'', a small wooden pail with a capacity of two glasses. It has generally been used in more modern times in reference to a smallish glass bottle, suitable (and often shaped) for sequestering in a hip or coat pocket.  
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Revision as of 17:05, 23 October 2015

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BRITISH NAGGON. AKA - "British Naggin (The)." AKA and see "Corney is Coming." Irish, Reel. D Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AAB. The tune appears in the Francis Reynold's music manuscript collection, c. 1885. Reynolds was a fiddler from Gaigue, Ballinimuck, County Longford.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, naggin is a variant of noggin, a word of uncertain origin recorded from the seventeenth century and meaning a small quantity of alcohol, usually one gill (0.25 imperial pints (140 mL)). Tomás S. Ó Máille derives it from the Irish naigín, cnaigín, a small wooden pail with a capacity of two glasses. It has generally been used in more modern times in reference to a smallish glass bottle, suitable (and often shaped) for sequestering in a hip or coat pocket.

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