13 October 2008

omg. look what i found on wiki.

Erin is an English derivative of the womb, much like the rest of us she came from the womb, any other explaination that could have been here for that would be stupid. (EEEEEERIIIIIIIIIIIIIINNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN).[1]

According to Irish mythology and folklore, Erin can be seen late at night in her pj's fighting invisible vampires.

Poets have rarely used this name as its ridiculously difficult to think of anything that ryhmes with it, and nobody wants to make the effort to find something that does so they just steered clear..[2].

Erin go bragh ("Éirinn go brách" in standard orthography), a slogan dating from the 1798 Advertising campaigns for Erin. There has never been any information recovered as to why that would have happened. The etymological history of her as she drifted throughout the Gaelic region gave rise to its use by the early Scots to both mean Ireland and "Shut up beej" - as Ireland lies to the west of Scotland and Beej needs to shut up...again. [3]

As a given name, Erin is used for both sexes, however this is only in Ireland and is believed to be because people are too drunk to realise its not a very masculine name...at all. Although, given its origins, it is principally used as a female name(Too right you fuck). It first became a popular given name in the United States.[citation needed] Erin is also a name for Ireland in Welsh, and is one of the top 20 most popular girls' names in Wales(Also referred to as Land of Rain andSheep Country).[4]

As a family name, Erin has been used as one of the many spellings of the name because when you start introducing other spellinds, not only does it not look the same, it most definatly doesn't sound the same, so its really not the fucking same is it? of the Scottish clan "Irwin"(Which is Er-Win, not Erin, so how is that another spelling?) - which was involved in the Scottish Plantations of Ireland, the war in which The Scots invaded Ireland and planted loads of fucking onions in inappropriate places to piss them off, like under their garden path so it grows and cracks it and has to be replaced, and in their carrot patch so it because a Carrot and an Onion Patch.[5] However, their name was originally derived from the place of the same name near Dumfries, and means "green water", from Brittonic ir afon. [6] [7]

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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