Перевод: с исландского на английский

с английского на исландский

chatter

  • 1 òvaîra, masa

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > òvaîra, masa

  • 2 skvaldur

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > skvaldur

  • 3 hjal

    n. chatter, talk.
    * * *
    n. chatter, talk, tittle-tattle, Edda 110, Fbr. 58, Fms. x. 333, xi. 19, Vápn. 16, Sturl. i. 22, Niðrst. 4: the saying, opt stendr íllt af kvenna hjali, Gísl. 15. hjals-kona, u, f. a courtesan, Dropl. 19.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > hjal

  • 4 HJALA

    * * *
    (að), v. to chatter, talk (hjala e-n);
    hjalast við, to talk together.
    * * *
    að, to chatter, talk, Ísl. ii. 330, 332, Ld. 214, Sturl. i. 22; hjala við e-n, Nj. 203, Ísl. ii. 349, 378: recipr., hjalask við, to talk together, 321.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > HJALA

  • 5 kjapta

    (að), v. to chatter, gabble.
    * * *
    að, to chatter, gabble, tell tales, use scurrilous language, Fas. iii. 305.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > kjapta

  • 6 klaka

    * * *
    (að), v. to twitter, chatter (of birds);
    refl., klakast við um e-t, to have a dispute about.
    * * *
    1.
    að, [Dan. klukke], to twitter, of a swallow; to chatter, of a pie; hann heyrði at igður klökuðu á hrísinu, Sæm. 136, Eg. 420, Stj. 80, Þiðr. 168, Karl. 544: of an eagle, Ísl. ii. 195: metaph., of a person, ok und kvernum klaka, Ls. 44:—reflex., klakask við, to have a dispute about; við biskup munum klakask við um kirkju-bann, Bs. i. 749.
    2.
    u, f. a pr. name. Klöku-ætt, f. the family of K., Landn.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > klaka

  • 7 SENNA

    I)
    (-ta, -t), v.
    1) to chatter, talk;
    2) to bandy words (s. við e-n).
    f. gibing, bickering.
    * * *
    t, to chatter; sennu vit ór söðlum, Hdl. 8; þat erumk sennt, it is told us, Bragi.
    2. to bandy words; er þat makligast at þú sennir við heima-menn þína, Nj. 52; senna vid bræðr ok systr, Hom. 34; sennti Loki þar við öll goð, Edda 68; s. við sér verra mann, Hm. 126; einn jötunn, … Þrágirni vanr við Þór sennti, Hým. 28.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > SENNA

  • 8 skruma

    (að), v. to swagger, chatter.
    * * *
    að, to swagger, Grett. 144 A: to chatter, Fb. i. 211, 253.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > skruma

  • 9 DREKKA

    * * *
    I)
    (drekk; drakk, drukkum; drukkinn), v.
    1) to drink (drekka mjöð, öl, mungát);
    drekka full, minni, horn, to drink a toast, cup, horn;
    drekka drykk, to drink a draught (þú skalt drekka af tvá drykki);
    drekka brjóst spena, to suck;
    drekka úmælt, without measure;
    drekka fast (mjök), to drink hard;
    drekka e-n af stokki, to drink one under the table;
    drekka sér lítit vit, drekka frá sér vit ilit, to drink away one’s reason;
    2) to hold, celebrate a feast (drekka veizlu, brullaup, erfi);
    3) with preps.:
    drekka af keri, to drink out of a vessel (drukku þeir af einu silfrkeri);
    to drink off (empty) a vessel, cup (hann tók við horninu ok drakk af);
    drekka á e-n, to drink to a person;
    refl., drekkast á, to drink to one another;
    impers., drekkr á e-n, one ships a sea;
    drekka til e-s = drekka á e-n;
    f.
    1) drink, beverage;
    Ægis drekka, the drinking at Ægir’s.
    * * *
    pret. drakk, pl. drukku; sup. drukkit; pres. drekk; pret. subj. drykki; [Ulf. drigkan; A. S. drinkan; Engl. drink; O. H. G. trinkan; M. H. G. trinken; Dan. drikke; Swed. dricka]:— to drink, the beverage or feast in acc.; d. mjöð, Hm. 18; mungát, el, Fms. viii. 166, Hm. 82; d. full, minni ( a toast), Eg. 552, Fms. vi. 442; d. horn, to drain, drink off a horn, a cup, Hkr. i. 35; síðan tók Kolskeggr justu eina af miði fulla ok drakk, Nj. 43; d. drykk, to drink a draught, Fms. xi. 233; eptir þat tók Þórir kalkann ok drakk af tvá drykki, Gullþ. 7; þú skalt d. af tvá drykki, id.; d. brjóst (acc.), to suck (v. brjóst-drekkr), Mar. 656 A. 23, cp. Gþl. 504.
    β. to hold a feast, the feast in acc.; d. Jól, Fms. vi. 100, Fagrsk. 4 (in the poem of Hornklofi); d. veizlu, Nj. ii; d. brullaup, Fms. xi. 88; d. erfi, Nj. 167.
    γ. denoting the mode of drinking; d. ein-menning, to drink one to one, Eg. 551; d. tví-menning, to drink two to two, id.; d. fast, to drink hard, Eb. 184; d. úmælt, to drink without measure (cp. mál-drykkja), Fms. iii. 18; d. til e-s, to drink to a person, Eg. 552, Sturl. iii. 305, Bs. i. 848, 798; d. á e-n, id., Fms. iv. 333, vi. 442 (cp. á-drykkja); d. e-n af stokki, to drink one under the table, iv. 167; d. frá sér vit, to drink one’s wits away, ix. 339, Hm. 11; the allit. phrase, d. ok dæma, to drink and chatter, Rm. 29: adding the prepp. af, ór, to drink off a cup; d. af dýra hornum, Fms. vi. 442, Eg. 206, 207: absol. to drink, hold a feast, Eg. 43.
    δ. impers. (vide á-drykkir) of a ship, to ship a sea, metaph., Al. 139.
    ε. recipr., drekkask á, to drink to one another, Hkr. ii. 249, N. G. L. i. 211, Js. 78.
    2. part. pass. drukkinn, drunken, tipsy, Eb. 154, Fms. i. 59, Eg. 552.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > DREKKA

  • 10 dæla

    f. ship’s pump.
    * * *
    u, f.
    I. a small dale, Sturl. ii. 100 (Ed.)
    II. a naut. term, a contrivance to serve the purpose of a ship’s pump, Edda (Gl.); hence dælu-austr, m. emptying a ship by a dæla, Fbr. 131, Grett. 95; dælu-ker, n. a kind of bucket: hann hað þrælinn færa sér í d. þat er hann kaliaði sjó, Landu. 251; hence the metaph. phrase, láta dæluna ganga, to pour out incessantly, chatter without ceasing, Grett. 98. The ancients cannot well have known the pump; but as dælu-austr is distinguished from byttu-austr, where the buckets were handed up, so dæla seems to have been a kind of groove through which the bilge water was made to run out into the sea instead of emptying every bucket by handing it overboard: in Norse döla means a groove-formed trough, eaves, a trench, and the like, D. N. iv. 751, Ivar Aasen s. v. dæla, p. 75.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > dæla

  • 11 DÆMA

    * * *
    d or ð, [dómr; Ulf. dômian; A. S. dêman; Engl. deem (as in demster); O. H. G. tomjan; lost in mod. Germ.; Swed. dömma; Dan. dömme]:—a law term, to give judgment, pass sentence; d. mál, to give judgment in a case, Nj. 56, Eg. 417; hvat sem at dæma er, Þorst. St. 55; lét dæma vörnina, caused judgment to be given on the part of the defence (in relerence to a curious Norse custom, by which both plaintiff and defendant pleaded before different courts, which had finally to adjust the sentence according to rules varying with the circumstances), Nj. 240; d. dóm, to pass sentence, Fms. xi. 246; d. rangan dóm, Sks. 109 B: the fines etc. in acc., d. fé, útlegðir, sekð, to pass sentence to a fine, outlawry, payment, etc., Grág. i. 320; útlegðir þær er á alþingi eru dæmðar, 3; fé þat á dæmask á heimili þess er sóttr er, 320; á þá at dæmask féit þannug, then the money is to pass (by sentence) to them, 378; dæma eindaga á fé, to fix a term for payment, 3; d. lög, to pass a lawful sentence, Fms. xi. 224; d. af, to make void, Sks. 11: d. um e-t, to judge of a thing, 625. 60: with acc. of the person, d. e-n skógarmann, to proclaim one an outlaw, Nj. 240; d. sýknan, sekan, etc.: adding dat. of the person, d. e-m e-t, to adjudge a thing to one; d. e-m fé, or the like; even, dæma e-m dóm, to deal a sentence out to one, Fms. xi. l. c.: adding prep. af, d. fé af e-m, to give judgment against his claim, Bs. ii. 91; but more usually, d. e-n af e-u, to declare one to have forfeited; the instances in Grág., N. G. L., and the Sagas are almost endless.
    β. to ‘deem,’ give an opinion, judge.
    II. to chatter, talk, mostly in poetry; esp. in the allit. phrase, drekka ok d., vide Lex. Poët. and drekka; en er þeir áttu of þessa hluti at d., when they were talking of those things, 623. 55.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > DÆMA

  • 12 gjálfra

    að, to roar, of the sea: to chatter.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > gjálfra

  • 13 glósa

    * * *
    1.
    u, f. (for. word), a gloss, explanation, Sks. 552, Bs. i. 737: a banter, taunt (Dan. glose), mod.
    2.
    ( glósera), að, to explain by a gloss, Bs. i. 737, Sks. 7: to chatter, Fas. ii. 110.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > glósa

  • 14 KNÉ

    * * *
    (gen. pl. knjá, dat. knjám or knjóm), m.
    1) knee;
    sitja á kné e-m, to sit on a person’s knee;
    ganga (koma, fara, hvarfa) fyrir kné e-m, to approach one as a suppliant;
    koma e-m á kné, to bring one to his knees, overcome;
    láta kné fylgja kviði, to plant the knee on the belly;
    sitja fyrir knjóm e-rri, to attend a woman in childbirth;
    * * *
    n., gen. pl. knjá, dat. knjám, and older knióm; [Goth. kniu; A. S. cneow; O. H. G. chniu: Germ. knie; Dan. knæ; Lat. genu; Gr. γόνυ]:—the knee; hrynja í kné, Þkv. 30; á knjánum, Fms. i. 182; á bæði kné, Nj. 70; setja á kné e-m, Fms. i. 16; andaðisk Kjartan í knjám Bolla, ii. 257; á kné kalinn, Hm. 3; þat er fall, ef maðr styðr niðr kné eðr hendi, Grág.
    2. phrases, ganga, koma (fara, hvarfa) fyrir kné e-m, to go, come, before another’s knees, approach as a suppliant, Nj. 212, 229, Fbr. (in a verse), Fms. viii. 299; leiða e-n fyrir kné e-m, id., Sks. 650; láta kné fylgja kvíði, let the knee follow the belly, plant the knee on the belly, in wrestling, Grett. 28 new Ed.; koma e-m á kné, to bring one to his knees, overcome; öllum kemr hann (the death) á kné, Al. 132; henni (Elli = the Age) hefir engi á kné komit, Edda ii. 286, Karl. 421; tala um þvert kné sér, to ‘talk across one’s knees,’ to gossip, chatter, Sturl. iii. 150; rísa á kné, to arise, Hým. 51; sitja fyrir kné, knjóm e-m, to sit at one’s knees, feet, Og. 8 (of a midwife); en þjónustu-kona hennar sat fyrir knjóm henni, ok skyldi taka við barninu, Fms. viii. 7; falla á kné, to fall on one’s knees, Edda 33; þá steig hann af baki, féll á kné ok baðsk fyrir, 92; leggjask á kné, id., 95.
    3. knee-timber, in boat-building; engi var saumr í, en viðjar fyrir kné, Fms. vii. 216; ok eigi var meiri sjór á en í mitt knjám, Bs. i. 390; ertog fyrir kné hvert, krapta hvern ok kollu hverja, N. G. L. ii. 283.
    COMPDS: knésbót, knjádúkr, knjáliðr.
    II. [A. S. cneow; but cp. also Ulf. knods = γένος, Phil. iii. 5; O. H. G. knot; Hel. cnostes]:— a degree in relationship or lineage, spec, a degree of cognate relationship, a Norse law term, (höfuðbaðm is the agnate); at sjaunda kné ok sjaunda lið, in the seventh cognate and agnate degree, N. G. L. i. 15; at fimta kné ok fimta lið, id.; at fimta kné ok fimta manni, to the fifth degree of relalionship by the female and the fifth by the male side, 350; til níunda knés, 49, 50; af kné hverju, at sétta kné, 148; nú skal engi maðr fá frændkonu sína skyldri en at fimta kné, ok at fimta manni frændleif, 350; kvenn-kné (q. v.), cognate lineage.
    B. COMPDS: knébeðr, knébeygjask, knébjörg, knéfall, knéfalla, knékast, knékrjúpa, knéliðr, knérunnr, knésetja, knésetningr, knésig, knéskél, knéskot, knésól.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > KNÉ

  • 15 létt-hjalað

    n. part.; e-m verð l., to chatter, Fms. xi. 234.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > létt-hjalað

  • 16 MASA

    * * *
    að, to chatter, prattle.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > MASA

  • 17 mál-bein

    n. the ‘talk-bone,’ one of the bones in the head, Ísl. Þjóðs. ii. 547; láta málbeinið ganga, to chatter glibly.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > mál-bein

  • 18 munn-tal

    n. chatter; munntal jötna, poët. = gold, see the legend in Edda 47.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > munn-tal

  • 19 ruma

    að, to chatter (= rausa); um þat er Ámundi remba rumar, Fms. ix. 332, v. l.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ruma

  • 20 senna

    I)
    (-ta, -t), v.
    1) to chatter, talk;
    2) to bandy words (s. við e-n).
    f. gibing, bickering.
    * * *
    u, f. high words, gibing; deilur ok sennur, slíðrfeng s., Gh. 1, MS. 544. 39; ógóðgjarnra manna sennur, 677. 6; sennur ok öl, Sdm. 30; Loka-senna, the gibing of Loki, the name of a poem, Sæm. 113 (Bugge); Flærðar-senna, the name of a poem by Hallgrim Pétrsson; the name was prob. borrowed from the Eddic poem.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > senna

См. также в других словарях:

  • Chatter — may refer to: Chatter (machining) or machining vibrations Contact bounce or chatter, a common problem with mechanical switches and relays Chatter (terrorist), the volume of communication to or from suspected terrorists Project CHATTER (1947–53),… …   Wikipedia

  • Chatter — Chat ter, n. 1. Sounds like those of a magpie or monkey; idle talk; rapid, thoughtless talk; jabber; prattle. [1913 Webster] Your words are but idle and empty chatter. Longfellow. [1913 Webster] 2. Noise made by collision of the teeth, as in… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chatter — Chat ter, v. t. To utter rapidly, idly, or indistinctly. [1913 Webster] Begin his witless note apace to chatter. Spenser. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • chatter — CHATTER, v. n. qui ne se dit que d Une chatte qui fait ses petits. Une chatte qui est prête à chatter. Elle a chatté cette nuit …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798

  • chatter — [n] constant or rapid talk babble, blather, chat, chitchat, gas*, gossip, jabber*, palaver, prattle*, twaddle, yakking*; concepts 266,278 Ant. drawl chatter [v] speak fast and non stop babble, blab*, blather, cackle, chat, chitchat, clack, gab*,… …   New thesaurus

  • chatter — [chat′ər] vi. [ME chateren: orig. echoic] 1. to make short, indistinct sounds in rapid succession [birds and squirrels chatter] 2. to talk fast, incessantly, and foolishly 3. to click together rapidly, as the teeth do when the lower jaw trembles… …   English World dictionary

  • Chatter — Chat ter, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Chattered}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Chattering}.] [Of imitative origin. Cf. {Chat}, v. i. {Chitter}.] 1. To utter sounds which somewhat resemble language, but are inarticulate and indistinct. [1913 Webster] The jaw makes… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Chatter — Chatter. См. Вибрация. (Источник: «Металлы и сплавы. Справочник.» Под редакцией Ю.П. Солнцева; НПО Профессионал , НПО Мир и семья ; Санкт Петербург, 2003 г.) …   Словарь металлургических терминов

  • chatter — index bombast, prattle Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • chatter — (v.) early 13c., chateren to twitter, gossip, earlier cheateren, chiteren, of echoic origin. Cf. Du. koeteren jabber, Dan. kvidre twitter, chirp. Related: Chattered; chattering. Phrase chattering class in use by 1893, with a reference perhaps… …   Etymology dictionary

  • chatter — vb *chat, gab, patter, prate, babble, gabble, jabber, gibber Analogous words: see those at CHAT …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

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