Перевод: с исландского на английский

с английского на исландский

a quarry

  • 1 bráî, e-î sem er elt eîa ofsótt

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > bráî, e-î sem er elt eîa ofsótt

  • 2 grjótnáma

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > grjótnáma

  • 3 veiîibráî

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > veiîibráî

  • 4 vinna (grjót) úr námu

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > vinna (grjót) úr námu

  • 5 berg-högg

    n. a quarry, Þjal. 8; cp. berhögg.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > berg-högg

  • 6 ber-högg

    n. [berr, nudus, or rather = berghögg, metaph. for a quarry], in the phrase, ganga á (í) b. við e-n, metaph. to make open fight, deal rudely with, Fms. xi. 248, Ld. 142; Jóann gekk á b. at banna, St. John interdicted openly, 625. 93, in all those passages ‘á:’ in mod. usage ‘í,’ so Greg. 80, Sturl. ii. 61, Þorst. Síðu-H. 7.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ber-högg

  • 7 GRJÓT

    n. stones; verða at grjóti, to be turned into stones; bera grjót á e-n, berja e-n grjóti, to stone one.
    * * *
    n. [A. S. greôt; Engl. grit; Hel. griot; O. H. G. grioz; Low Germ. grott = gravel; Germ. greis, meaning gravel, shingle, pebbles, or the like; cp. also Engl. to grout = to build a wall of rubble with liquid mortar poured in; the Icel. grautr (q. v.) and grútr (q. v.) are also kindred]:—stones, but chiefly with the notion of rough stones or rubble in a building, etc.; grjót, like Engl. grit, is a collective word, and is consequently never used in plur.; a single stone is called steinn, not grjót; velta grjóti, to roll stones, Gs. 12; nú er grjót þat at gleri orðit, Hdl. 10; grjót ( quarry) þat er til kirkna þarf at hafa, N. G. L. i. 240; hann lét ok göra há-altarit með grjót, Bs. i. 830; telgt grjót, cut stones, Stj. 564; rata munn létumk grjót gnaga, Hm. 106; hljóp ofan skriða mikil með grjóti, Anal. 64; verða at grjóti, to be turned into stones, Edda 89; þeir báru grjót á rótina, Gullþ. 50; torf eða grjót, Grág. ii. 262; þeir ruddu hitt ok báru þar í grjót (sinking a ship), Eg. 125; dys ór grjóti, Ld. 152; berja grjóti, to stone, Gísl. 34; vóru þau barin grjóti í hel, id.; sá engin líkindi Dana-virkis, nema grjótið, but the heaps of stones, Fms. i. 28; konungr hugði at grjótinu ok sá þar rautt allt, xi. 239; svá at þess mætti eigi sjá merki, nema þat eina er grjótið var rautt eptir, 241 (of the shingle on the beach); hvárt sem vill, af heitu grjóti eðr köldu, Sks. 421; límsett grjót, lime-set stones in a wall, Orkn. 352 (in a verse); lét jarl bera vatn í at kæla grjótið þat er brunnit var, id., (in a siege in order to make the walls crack, see Notes and Queries, Nov. 21, 1868); berjask með skotum ok grjóti (in a battle), Fs. 14; grjót ok skot, stones and missiles, Fms. vii. 82; þeir höfðu borið at sér grjót ok báru á þá, bíða þess er grjótið eyddisk, Sturl. ii. 59: of bricks, Stj. 264: in poetry, ölna grjót, the stones of the wrist, = jewels; skýja-grjót, ‘cloud-stones,’ hail; grjót orða, munns, the stones of words, of the mouth, i. e. the teeth: giants are called grjót-niðaðr, grjót-móði, grjót-öld, the stone people, people of the Stone Age, Lex. Poët.; Grjót-unn, name of a giantess (cp. Steinunn, a female name), whence Grjótunnar-garðar, a giant’s castle, Edda: collectively in compds, -grýti, blá-grýti, stór-grýti, rough stones; hraun-grýti, lava.
    COMPDS: grjótberg, grjótbjörg, grjótbjörn, grjótbrot, grjótburðr, grjótfall, grjótflaug, grjótflutning, grjótgarðr, grjóthagl, grjóthaugr, grjóthlað, grjóthlass, grjóthóll, grjóthríð, grjóthörgr, grjótkast, grjótklettr, grjótligr, grjótmeistari, grjótmöl, grjótpáll, grjótskriða, grjótsmiðr, grjótsmíð, grjótstarf, grjótsveinn, grjótsýsla, grjótrugr, grjótvarði, grjótvarp.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > GRJÓT

  • 8 grjót-berg

    n. quarry, Fms. viii. 278, Bs. i. 890.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > grjót-berg

  • 9 harðsteina-grjót

    n. a quarry of h., Fms. viii. 224.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > harðsteina-grjót

  • 10 hein-berg

    n. a hone-quarry, Edda 58.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > hein-berg

  • 11 hellu-berg

    n. a slate quarry.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > hellu-berg

  • 12 hellu-nám

    n. a slate quarry, Vm. 36.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > hellu-nám

  • 13 kvern-berg

    n. a mill-stone quarry, D. N., H. E. i. 396.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > kvern-berg

  • 14 RAUÐR

    a. red;
    jarl setti þá rauðan (= varð rauðr) sem blóð, the earl turned red as blood;
    snýta rauðu, to bleed at the nose;
    rauðr víkingr = rauðavíkingr.
    * * *
    adj., rauð, rautt, compar. rauðari, rauðastr, [common to all Teut. languages, although it appears not in Ulf. himself, but in the Skeirings]:—red; rautt klæði, Nj. 35; rauðr hestr, Fs. 67: rautt skegg, Fb. iii. 246; blátt eða rautt, Grág. ii. 13; rauðr sem blóð, Ísl. ii. 220; rautt gull, Þiðr. 187; rautt berg, a red quarry, Bs. i. 830:—phrases, rautt brennr fyrir, ‘red burns afar,’ i. e. there is some hope yet; taldi enn nokkut rautt mundu fyrir brenna, Fms. viii. 34, Fs. 68; snýta rauðu, to spout blood, Fb. i. 412, Karl. 149; falda rauðu, to wear a red hood, to die a bloody death, Landn. (in a verse):—neut., et rauða, the yolk of an egg, Pr. 472:—metaph. bloody. fierce, arch, rauðr víkingr = rauða-víkingr, Fms. xi. 121; see rauðahaf, rauðarán, rauðkinni:—various shades of red, fagr-r. fair-red, Vsp.: dreyr-r., crimson; dumb-r., chestnut-red: dökk-r., dark-red; mó-r., coffee-coloured.
    2. in local names, Rauða-mýrr, Rauð-á, Rauði-gnúpr, Rauða-fell, Rauði-melr, Rauði-lækr, Rauði-sandr, Rauða-skriða, Rauða-vatn, Landn., from the reddish colour of bogs and moorlands, which was supposed to be a sign that there was iron in the soil; whence Rauðæ-ingar, Rauð-melingar, Rauð-lækingar, Rauð-sendir, the men from R., Landn., Sturl.: in pr. names, Rauðr, Rauð-úlfr, Landn.
    B. COMPDS: rauðbleikr, rauðbrúnaðr, rauðbrúnn, rauðbúinn, rauðdropóttr, rauðeygðr, rauðflekkóttr, rauðfreknóttr, rauðgulr, rauðhárr, rauðklæddr, rauðleitr, rauðlita, rauðlitaðr, rauðlitr, rauðmengjaðr, rauðsíðóttr, rauðskeggjaðr, rauðskjöldóttr, rauðumskjaldi.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > RAUÐR

  • 15 tálgu-grjót

    n. [Norse talg-stein], a quarry of free-stone, Fms. v. 215, Hom. 122, D. N. iv. 82.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > tálgu-grjót

  • 16 grjótberg

    n. quarry.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > grjótberg

  • 17 heinberg

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > heinberg

См. также в других словарях:

  • Quarry Hill Creative Center — Quarry Hill Creative Center, in Rochester, Vermont, is Vermont s oldest alternative living group or community. History On April 10, 1946, Irving Fiske (born Irving Fishman in Brooklyn, New York, on March 5, 1908), a playwright, inventor,… …   Wikipedia

  • Quarry Bay — (zh t|t=鰂魚涌; literally Crucian Carp Stream or River or 石礦灣 / 採石灣) is an area beneath Mount Parker in Eastern District on Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong. The western portion of the area was also formerly known as Lai Chi (麗池). Traditionally being an… …   Wikipedia

  • quarry — quar‧ry [ˈkwɒri ǁ ˈkwɔː , ˈkwɑː ] noun quarries PLURALFORM [countable] a place where large amounts of stone, sand etc are dug out of the ground: • a granite quarry quarry verb [transitive] : • granite that is quarried in Brazil * * * Ⅰ …   Financial and business terms

  • Quarry Bank — is a small town in the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley, West Midlands, England. Locally, the name is often pronounced, Quarry Bonk (In Black Coountry Dialect) [http://www.blackcountrybugle.co.uk The Black Country Bugle local newspaper] Originally… …   Wikipedia

  • Quarry Hill, Leeds — Quarry Hill is an area of Central Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It is surrounded by the Leeds Inner Ring Road to the east and north. The Leeds York / Hull railway runs just south of the district into the city centre.It was originally an inner… …   Wikipedia

  • Quarry Bank Mill — is an historic factory in Cheshire, England, one of the best preserved of the Industrial Revolution and is now a museum of the cotton industry. It is a Grade II* listed building. [http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/search/details.aspx?pid=1… …   Wikipedia

  • Quarry Hill — is the name of several places in the world: *Quarry Hill, Leeds, England *Quarry Hill, Kowloon, Hong Kong *Quarry Hill, Bendigo, Australia *Quarry Hill Creative Center, Rochester, Vermont *Quarry Hill Nature Center, Rochester, Minnesota …   Wikipedia

  • Quarry tile — is a building construction material, usually 1/2 to 3/4 inches (13 to 19 mm) in thickness, made by the extrusion process from natural clay or shales. [http://www.ceramic tile.com/glossary National Tile Contractors Association] [American Society… …   Wikipedia

  • Quarry — Quar ry, n.; pl. {Quarries}. [OE. querre, OF. cuiri[ e]e, F. cur[ e]e, fr. cuir hide, leather, fr. L. corium; the quarry given to the dogs being wrapped in the akin of the beast. See {Cuirass}.] 1. (a) A part of the entrails of the beast taken,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Quarry Bay School — is the oldest English Schools Foundation primary school in Hong Kong. There are around 720 students. The principal is currently Debra Gardener. The previous principal was David James Harrison who, before he retired, had been at Quarry Bay School… …   Wikipedia

  • Quarry, Newfoundland and Labrador — Quarry is an abandoned railway community that was located in the Gaff Topsails area of the province of Newfoundland, Canada. The community lies just north of Buchans and takes its name from the quarry established in the 1890 s when the… …   Wikipedia

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

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