Inver is the Goidelic or q-Celtic form, an Anglicised spelling of
Scottish Gaelic '
(originally pronounced with /v/, though in modern Gaelic it has shifted to /j/), which occurs in Irish as ' or '
, going back to Old Irish '. This is derived from the same Proto-Indo-European root
*bher-, but with the prefix
in-, 'into'. The word also occurs in
Manx in the form
Inver. Place-names with
inver are very common throughout Scotland, where they outnumber
aber-names by about 3:1. They are most common throughout the Western Highlands and the Grampians, the largest town containing the element being
Inverness. Place-names with
inver are, however, oddly seldom in Ireland, given that the form is originally Irish; Ireland tends instead to have names with
béal ('mouth') in such locations, as
Béal Átha na Sluaighe (
Ballinasloe, County Galway),
Béal an Átha an Fheá (
Ballina, County Mayo) or
Béal Feirste (
Belfast). The difference in usage may be explained by the fact that Gaelic was spoken in Ireland long before it was brought to Scotland, and hence the prevailing fashion could have been different. In Anglicised forms,
inver occasionally appears as
inner, such as
Innerleithen. Innerhaddon is variant of Inverhaddon. In some cases, an "Inver" has been lost, e.g.
Ayr (
Inbhir Air), which was recorded as "Inberair", and
Ayre (Inver Ayre) in the
Isle of Man. Occasionally, the English name forms are entirely unrelated:
Dingwall (
Inbhir Pheofharan) in Scotland and
Arklow () in Ireland both have "Inbhir-" in their Gaelic forms. ==Syntax==