Перевод: с исландского на все языки

со всех языков на исландский

(at+a+distance)

  • 41 viku-för

    f. a week’s journey, of distance, Symb. 15.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > viku-för

  • 42 VÍÐR

    I)
    (gen. -ar; pl. -ir, acc. -u), m.
    1) tree (hann sá einn íkorna í viðum uppi);
    2) forest, wood; sól gengr til viðar, the sun sets;
    3) felled trees, timber (nú vil ek at þú takir mjöl ok við);
    4) mast.
    prep. = við I.
    = vinnr, from vinna.
    * * *
    víð, vítt, adj., compar. víðari, superl. víðastr; [A. S. wid; Engl. wide; Germ. weit; Dan. vid]:—wide, large, of extension; víðr ok rúmr sjór, Stj. 78; víðir skógar, Eg. 130; víð mörk, 57; víðan skjöld, Stj. 461; víða öxi, Sturl. i. 63; pallar svá víðir, at …, Grág. i. 4, passim: allit. phrase, á víða vega, wide abroad, broadcast, Sdm. 46; víðs vegar, in all directions, being scattered about; flýja víðs vegar, Fms. ii. 217, vi. 87; dreifask víðs vegar, Eg. 530.
    2. neut.; yfir Noregi svá vítt sem Haraldr inn Hárfagri hafði átt, Fms. v. 238; nú brennr víðara enn hann vildi, Grág. ii. 295; áin féll miklu víðara, Stj. 284; nema hann hafi hross lengr eða víðara, more widely, for a greater distance, Grág. i. 433; um allan Noreg ok enn miklu víðara, Hkr. i. 71; um allt Hálogaland ok þó víðara hvar, Fas. ii. 504; förum heldr víðara til, Fms. vi. 151; leggja eld í Hallvarðs-kirkju ok víðara ( in more places) í bæinn, vii. 212.
    II. víðs, gen. used as adverb, mostly spelt viz, very far, full; enn er hann vildi tala hann þá var hann víðs fjarri, very far off, Edda i. 344 (Cod. Worm., vitz Cod. Reg.); viz ramligr, full strong, Merl. 2. 50; viz errilig, very fierce, Fms. vi. 169 (in a verse); viz mörg ekkja, full many a widow, Mork. (in a verse).
    B. COMPDS: víðbláinn, víðbygðr, víðfaðmr, víðfeðmir, víðfleygr, víðflögull, víðfrægja, víðfrægr, víðförli, víðförull, víðgymnir, víðgyrðill, víðheimr, víðleikr, víðlenda, víðlendi, víðlendr, víðliga, víðligr, víðopnir, víðræðr, víðræss, víðsýni, víðsýnn.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > VÍÐR

  • 43 YDDA

    * * *
    (yddi), v. to show the point on the other side (S. lagði sverðinu í gegnum hann, svá at út yddi um bakit).
    * * *
    d, [oddr], to shew the point on the other side, when a weapon is run through; gegnum skjöld ok brjóst svá at yddi um bakit, Eg. 380, Fms. viii. 332; laust undir kverkina, svá at yddi út um hnakkann, vii. 211; [róa] svá langt vestr sem yddir bænhuss-krossinn heima á Sævarlandi, to pull westwards till the point of the cross at home at S. is just seen, Dipl. iv. 9; það yddir á e-u, the point is seen, e. g. of a steeple or mountain seen at a distance.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > YDDA

  • 44 þingfarar-kaup

    n. a fee for travelling to the parliament, as a law term, being a tax levied from every franklin, out of which those were paid who had to go up to the parliament on public business, whether as jurors, judges, or otherwise; every ‘þing-heyjandi’ received his fee from this source, the amount being regulated by the distance from the place of the assembly, or by the number of day’s-journeys each man had to travel, Grág. i. 24, cp. Jb. 52. A census was taken (about A. D. 1100) in Iceland of all the franklins who had to pay the þing-tax, which shewed that there were at that time 4,500 cottagers and proletarians not included, Íb. 17; a man who paid no such tax could neither sit as ‘neighbour’ or judge, Grág. i. 50; ef bóndi á fé minna, en hann eigi þingfarar-kaupi at gegna, ok …, K. Þ. K. 4. For Norway see Gþl. Þingfarab. ch. 2.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > þingfarar-kaup

  • 45 þing-maðr

    m. a person present at an assembly, a member of parliament; þeir gengu til lögbergs ok aðrir þingmenn, Nj. 15; þingmenn ok dómarinn, Gþl. 172, Bs. i. 755 (the members of the alþing), and passim (see þingfesti); þingmanna dagleið, a day’s journey for a man travelling to the parliament, Jb. 10.
    2. a liegeman belonging to this or that þing- community; a franklin is said to be the ‘þingmaðr’ of such and such a priest (goði); þar sátu þingmenn Rúnólfs í hverju húsi, Bs. i. 20; hann var þ. Styrmis frá Ásgeirsá, Band, (begin.); ek spyr goða alla hverr sér kenni N.M. at þingmanni eða þriðjungs-manni, Grág. (Kb.) i. 40; þeir vóru þingmenn Þorgeirs goða, Lv. (begin.); Guðmundr (the priest) var því vanr, at ríða norðr um héruð á várin ok hitta þingmenn sína, ok ráða um héraðs-stjórn, 17; þingmenn Geitis, Vápn. 19; sendir Geitir orð þingmönnum sínum, 15, Eg. 724, passim; ef goði vill segja þingmann sinn brott or þingi við sik, Grág. i. 165, Nj. 261, Sturl. ii. 35, passim; see þingfesti. þingmanna-leið, f. a day’s journey for a þingmaðr, see the remarks s. v. þingför and þingfarar-kaup; but used in Icel. as a general measure of distance, answering to about twenty Engl. miles; distances on land are still measured so in Icel., e. g. a mountain is a þingmanna-leið milli bygða, cp. Hrafn. 11; see the map of Icel., where one ‘þingmanna-leið’ (or Icel. mile) is put at five geographical miles.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > þing-maðr

  • 46 ör-drag

    n. an arrow-shot, range, of distance; þrjú ördrög, Flóv. 40; látum milli ördrag eða lengra, Fms. viii. 382, Grág. ii. 19.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ör-drag

  • 47 ör-skot

    n. = ördrag, an arrow-shot, of distance, Al. 13, Karl. 286; örskots-lengð, Grág. i. 91. örskots-helgr, f. a law phrase, an asylum or sanctuary within arrow-shot. Grág. passim; cp. esp. the interesting record Landn. 5, ch. 4 (287, 288); the örskotshelgr is in Grág. Vsl. ch. 51 set at two hundred (i. e. 240) fathoms.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ör-skot

  • 48 allskammr

    a. very short; neut., allskammt, a very short way, short distance.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > allskammr

  • 49 fjarsýnis

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > fjarsýnis

  • 50 langleiði

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > langleiði

  • 51 skammr

    a.
    1) short (var sú leiðin skemmri); láta e-n höfði skemmri, to make one shorter by the head, to behead; neut., skammt, a short way, short distance (hann bjó skammt frá Skallagrími);
    2) of time, short, brief; skamma hríð, stund, but a short while; eiga skammt úlifat, to have but a short time to live; hann kvað skammt til þess, he said it would be soon; skammt frá þessu, a short while after this;
    3) adverbially, skömmu, skemmstu, lately, very lately, recently, very recently, = fyrir skömmu, skemmstu; skömmum, not long (sat hann skömmum við drykk); skemmrum, for a shorter time (at landit mundi verða skemmrum biskupslaust, ef tveir væri biskuparnir); sem skemmst, as short a while as possible.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > skammr

  • 52 stundarvegr

    m. short way, small distance.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > stundarvegr

  • 53 sœkja

    (sœki, sótta, sóttr), v.
    1) to seek (hann ætlar at s. sér kirkjuvið ok siglir þegar á haf); þangat sœkir þik engi, no one will seek thee thither; s. heilræði ok traust at e-m, to seek good counsel and help from one; s. um liðveizlu við e-n, to call on one for support;
    2) to go to fetch (B. átti erendi yfir fjörð at s. skjöldu sína ok vápn); s. e-t í e-n stað or til e-s staðar, to go to a place to fetch a thing (s. grös upp í hlíð, vatn til lœkjar);
    3) to visit, come to (enn aldna jötun ek sótta); s. e-n heim, to come to see one, visit one in his home; s. þing, to attend or frequent á þing; s. e-n at liðveizlu, um liðveizlu, to call on one for support;
    4) to attack, assail (s. e-n með vápnum; þessir munu s. oss með eldi); s. e-n heim, to fall upon one in his house (Gunnar sóttu heim þeir höfðingjar, er …);
    5) to catch, overtake (nú fiðr hann geldingaflokk ok fær eigi sótt);
    6) to overcome, master (munu þeir mik aldri fá sótt, meðan ek kem boganum við); to carry, take (eigi mun eyin sótt verða);
    7) to pursue; þeir sækja ferðina knáliga, they push on doughtily; s. fast róðrinn (sundit), to pull (swim) hard;
    8) to prosecute, in a lawsuit (s. e-n sökum, s. e-n til fullra laga); sótti K. til lands at Móeiðarhváli, K. laid claim to the land at M.; s. sök, mál, to carry on a suit; skalt þú s. þær sakir báðar, both these suits thou shall take up; s. mál til laga, to follow up a suit at law;
    9) to pass over (býðr þeim at s. fjallit norðr í bygð); var áin all-ill at s., the river was very bad to cross;
    10) absol. to proceed, go, advance (þeir stíga af hestunum ok sœkja upp á hólinn); er hann sótti langt austr, when he had advanced far eastward; s. á fund e-s, to go to see one; s. at, s. á, to attack (s. á borg); to urge the matter, insist (Þ. sótti á því meirr, en G. fór undan); s. eptir e-m, to pursue (Egill sótti þá eptir þeim); s. fram, to advance, go forward, in battle (E. sótti þá fram ok hjó til beggja handa); s. til e-s staðar, to frequent a place (til Túnsbergs sóttu mjök kaupmenn);
    11) refl., sœkjast, to advance, of a work in hand (en er á leið vetrinn, sóttist mjök borgargørðin); to be passed, of a road or distance; nú er meir en hálf-sótt, more than half-way; sóttist þeim seint skip þeira Hrúts, they were slow in boarding Hrut’s ship; þeir ætla, at þeim muni illa s. at vinna oss, they think it will be a hard struggle to master us; recipr., to seek one another sœkjast sér um líkir, birds of a feather flock together; to attack one another, fight (þeir nafnar sóttust lengi).

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > sœkja

  • 54 ördrag

    n. arrow-shot, used to express distance (Sveinki mun eigi flýja eitt ördrag).

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ördrag

  • 55 halda sig í fjarlægî

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > halda sig í fjarlægî

  • 56 lang-

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > lang-

  • 57 vera mjög nálægt

    come, be within striking distance of

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > vera mjög nálægt

См. также в других словарях:

  • distance — [ distɑ̃s ] n. f. • 1223; lat. distantia 1 ♦ Longueur qui sépare une chose d une autre. ⇒ 1. écart, écartement, éloignement, 1. espace, étendue, intervalle. Distance entre deux lieux. Distance d un point à un autre, de la Terre à la Lune. Évaluer …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Distance De Hausdorff — Felix Hausdorff (1868 1942) est le mathématicien à l origine de la distance portant maintenant son nom. En géométrie, la distance de Hausdorff est un outil topologique qui mesure l’éloignement de deux sous ensembles d’un espace …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Distance de hausdorff — Felix Hausdorff (1868 1942) est le mathématicien à l origine de la distance portant maintenant son nom. En géométrie, la distance de Hausdorff est un outil topologique qui mesure l’éloignement de deux sous ensembles d’un espace …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Distance (Mathématiques) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Distance. En mathématiques, une distance est une application qui formalise l idée intuitive de distance, c est à dire la longueur qui sépare deux points. Sommaire 1 Distance sur un ensemble …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Distance (mathematiques) — Distance (mathématiques) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Distance. En mathématiques, une distance est une application qui formalise l idée intuitive de distance, c est à dire la longueur qui sépare deux points. Sommaire 1 Distance sur un… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Distance euclidienne — Distance (mathématiques) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Distance. En mathématiques, une distance est une application qui formalise l idée intuitive de distance, c est à dire la longueur qui sépare deux points. Sommaire 1 Distance sur un… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Distance matrices in phylogeny — Distance matrices are used in phylogeny as non parametric distance methods were originally applied to phenetic data using a matrix of pairwise distances. These distances are then reconciled to produce a tree (a phylogram, with informative branch… …   Wikipedia

  • Distance De Hamming — La distance de Hamming, définie par Richard Hamming, est utilisée en informatique, en traitement du signal et dans les télécommunications. Elle joue un rôle important en théorie algébrique des codes correcteurs. Elle permet de quantifier la… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Distance de hamming — La distance de Hamming, définie par Richard Hamming, est utilisée en informatique, en traitement du signal et dans les télécommunications. Elle joue un rôle important en théorie algébrique des codes correcteurs. Elle permet de quantifier la… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Distance — Dis tance, n. [F. distance, L. distantia.] 1. The space between two objects; the length of a line, especially the shortest line joining two points or things that are separate; measure of separation in place. [1913 Webster] Every particle attracts …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Distance Comobile — La distance comobile est une caractérisation de la distance séparant deux objets astronomiques en faisant abstraction de l expansion de l univers, c est à dire en utilisant une unité de longueur qui suit l expansion de l univers. Tandis que la… …   Wikipédia en Français

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»