-
41 leir-vaðill
m. a shallow mud bank, Stj. 135. -
42 mar-bakki
a, m. the ‘sea-bank,’ the border between shoal and deep water along the coast, see Ivar Aasen; síð. in málvinir minir fyrir marbakkann sukku, Vígl. (in a verse), N. G. L. ii. 140, v. l. -
43 mar-rein
f. the sea line, in marreins-bakki, a, m. = marbakki, the bank where the deep and shallow water meet; nú hittir maðr sel fyrir ofan marreinsbakka, N. G. L. ii. 149 (v. l. marbakka); hann skal biðja hann heima vera meðan hann rær fyrir útan marreinsbakka eða gengr fyrir ofan garð, i. 89; þá skal hann ganga útan garðs eða fara út um marreinsbakka, ok fara aptr til húss síðan, 23. -
44 mold-bakki
a, m. an earth-bank, Fær. 177. -
45 ORMR
(-s, -ar), m. snake, serpent.* * *m. [Ulf. waurms = ὄφις; A. S. wyrm; Engl. worm: O. H. G. and Germ. wurm; Dan.-Swed. orm; Lat. vermis; cp. Orms-head in Wales]:—a snake, serpent, also including ‘worms’ (cp. maðkr), and even dragons, Hm. 85, Vsp. 44, 50, Gm. 34, Skm. 27, Akv. 31, Am. 22, 55. Fms. vi. 143, Hkr. i. 103, and passim; högg-ormr, a viper; eitr-ormr, the bane of snakes, i. e. the winter time. The abode of the wicked after death was a pit full of snakes (Hver-gelmir, Ná-strönd), Edda, Vsp. 44, which calls to mind the Gehenna in Mark ix. 43, 44, and one of the Bolgos in Dante’s Inferno, Canto 24. Serpents gnawed at the root of the world-tree Yggdrasil, Gm. 34. Pits of snakes were a place of punishment, Ragn. S. l. c., Am., Akv.; but only in mythological, not in historical records. Serpents brooded over gold and treasures, cp. the serpent Fafnir, Edda, Fm., Gullþ. ch. 4, Ragn. S. (begin.); whence in poetry gold is called orm-bekkr, -beðr, -ból, -garðr, -land, -látr, -láð, -reitr, -setr, -stallr, -torg, -vangr, -vengr, the bank, bed, abode, garden, land, litter, earth, etc. of snakes, Lex. Poët. For the world-serpent, see miðgarðr. orm-fellir, m. the snake-killer = the winter, Fms. vi. (in a verse): a sword is called a snake, blóð-ormr, rand-ormr, see Lex. Poët.; ketil-ormr, a sausage, Korm.: of ships of war with dragons’ heads, Ormr inn Langi, Ormr inn Skammi, Ó.T.II. pr. names, Ormr and Ormarr; and in compds, Hall-ormr, Ráð-ormr, Þór-ormr, Goð-ormr, Veðr-ormr. = the holy Serpent, a name which indicates serpent worship, although no record of such worship is found in the Sagas.COMPDS: ormsbit, ormabæli, ormstunga, ormaturn. -
46 sand-bakki
a, m. a sand-bank, -hill, Bs. i. 287. -
47 sef-rein
f. a sedge-bank. Lex. Poët. -
48 skot-bakki
a, m. a ‘shooting-bank,’ the butts against which the target was set up; fara í skotbakka, Fær. 46; vera á sundi eðr í skotbökkum, Fas. ii. 505; Oddr fylgdi þeim þar til er þeir Ásmundr höfðu átt skotbakka, 558. -
49 strand-lag
n. ‘strand-laying,’ the right of laying a net along a shore or bank, Grág. ii. 350. -
50 TEMPS
f. the river Thames; Tempsar bakki, -síða, -minni, the bank, mouth of the T., O. H. L. (in a verse), Fms. xi. 195. -
51 út-eyrr
f. an outer-bank, Fms. viii. 316, v. l. -
52 árbakki
m. bank of a river. -
53 elfarbakki
m. bank of a river. -
54 árströnd
f. bank of a river. -
55 eyrartangi
m. point of a gravel-bank (eyrr). -
56 flœðarbakki
-
57 leirbakki
m. clayey bank. -
58 marbakki
-
59 melbakki
m. bank grown with lyme-grass (melr). -
60 moldarbakki
m. earth-bank.
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