Hmm...so it's "Happy feast of/for Frith"? Interesting, I never thought of flayrah meaning "feast" before. I might add that definition to my collection. Thanks.
It might be more like 'Éneer Flayrah ol Frith' since flay means food and to consume flayrah must mean both good food and feast. Of course, this is just a
Hey Tom, Â Using Loganberry's Lapine it would be "eneer Frithmas hraeth!" (of course with an acute accent on the fist E in eneer) =) Â Malimar ... From: Tom
Merry Christmas everyone! I just watched this DVD for the first time, and while it was thoroughly mediocre, it was better than I expected. Put me in the mood