-
1 GLAP
* * *n. hallucination, seems only to be used in pl. glöp, as elli-glöp, dotage: a law term, flaws in law proceedings, Grág. i. 10. -
2 glap-ræði
n. a blunder, Band. 4. -
3 glapði
from glepja. -
4 glap-máll
adj. speaking vainly of, Ad. 1. -
5 glap-skuld
f. a fool’s fine for pranks or foolish acts, Hallfr. -
6 glap-stígr
m. a fool’s path, a stray path, cp. the Dan. saying, gjensti bliver ofte glapsti. -
7 glap-víg
n. accidental manslaughter, Landn. 180. -
8 ग्लप्
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9 GLEPJA
(glep, glapta, glaptr), v.1) to confuse one (in reading, speaking);2) to confound (g. sókn, vörn);3) to beguile (g. konu).* * *pret. glapði; sup. glapið or glapt; pres. glep; [glap]:— to confuse one in reading, speaking, or the like, Nj. 33: as a law term, to confound, glepja sókn, vörn, görð, Grág. i. 60, 382; g. þingför, þingreið, ii. 78; ok varðar þeiin fjörbaugs-garð ef þeir göra eigi ok hvegi er þeir glepja, i. 485: to beguile, Fms. i. 7, ii. 7, vi. 163, vii. 113, viii. 391, Eg. 587, Ls. 20, Eb. 252.2. reflex. to be confounded; hugði hann at glepjask mundi þerririnn (of weather), Eb. 152; hversu honum glapðisk sona-eignin, Ld. 236, Ó. H. 145 (vide glapna). -
10 glápa
t, to stare vacantly; gláp, n. a stare. -
11 glæpa-verk
n. a crime, Stj. 91. It is worth notice that in the heathen morals (as in the Old Test.) ‘foolish’ and ‘wicked’ are kindred words: glæpr, the derivative with changed vowel, means an evil deed, the primitive word glópr a fool; cp. also glap, glepja, which are from the same root. -
12 glöp
n. pl. blunders, as a law term. Grág. i. 10; vide glap, elli-glöp. -
13 -máll
adj. -spoken; in compds, glap-máll, hjá-máll, ein-máll. -
14 STIGR
(-s, ar; pl. -ar, -ir, acc. -a, -u), m. path;ryðja stíginn, to clear the way;taka úkunna stíga, to walk in unknown paths;stemma stíga fyrir e-m, to bar one’s way, cut one off;kanna úkunna stigu, to visit unknown paths (foreign lands);af hverjum stig, from everywhere.* * *(also sounded stígr, stíg and víg make rhyme in old poems), m., gen. stigs, dat. stig; n. pl. stigar, stiga, which forms seem older and better than stigir, stigu, which also occur: [A. S. stíg; Early Engl. stie; Engl. stair; Dan. sti; Germ. steg; cp. North. E. stye or stie, a steep ascent or pass, as in stye-head Pass]:—a path, footway; sveinarnir hljópu þegar á stiginn er heim lá til bæjarins, Fms. ii. 100; sá er stigana hafði bannat, Fs. 5; dreif liðit af hverjum stig (dat.). Anal. 88; ok ferr þá stigu, Edda 44; taka úkunna stiga, to walk in unknown paths, Fms, viii. 30; kanna ókunna stigu, to visit unknown paths, i. e. foreign lands; ganga þessa stigu, Fs. 32; þóttú lafir á stigum, id.; hylr stigu alla, of snow, Gísl. 28 (drífr í stigu alla, 112. l. c.); stemma stiga fyrir e-m, to bar one’s way, cut one off, Róm. 213; vega ok stiga, ways and paths, Sks. 625 B; götu ok stigu, Greg. 31; ryðja stiginn, to rid or clear the way, Eg. 289; af-stigr, Fs. 5; hjá-stigr, a by-path; leyni-stigr (q. v.), a hidden path; gagn-stígr, a ‘gain-path,’ short cut; glap-stigr, vil-stigr, stafkarls-stigr, ein-stigi, q. v. stiga-maðr, m. a highwayman. Eg. 537, Fs. 8, Gullþ. 10, Fms. v. 46; stigamenn ok ránsmenn, Hkr. ii. 336. -
15 ग्लै
glai
cl. 2. P. glāti MBh. III, 13730; XIII, 7365 ;
perf. jaglau Pāṇ. 7-4, 60 Kāṡ. ;
√2. jaglitha andᅠ - glātha Vop. VIII, 83 ;
Ā. jagle Pāṇ. 6-1, 45 Pat. and Kāṡ. ;
aor. aglāsīt Bhaṭṭ. ;
Subj. 2. sg. glāsīs MBh. III, 1210 ;
Prec. glāyāt, gley-, glāsīshṭa Pāṇ. 6-4, 68 Kāṡ.),
to feel aversion orᅠ dislike, be averse orᅠ reluctant orᅠ unwilling orᅠ disinclined to do anything
(dat. ṠBr. II, III, IX KātyṠr. Lāṭy. ;
orᅠ instr. MBh. III, 1210 orᅠ abl. (14541) orᅠ inf. Pāṇ. 3-4, 65);
to be languid orᅠ weary, feel tired, be exhausted, fade away, faint MBh. Ṡāntiṡ. Bhaṭṭ. ;
to be hard upon any one (acc.) MBh. III, 13730:
Caus. glapayati (- glāp- seeᅠ ava-, pra-, vi-;
ep. alsoᅠ Ā. - te XIII, 4694 ;
aor. 2. sg. ajiglapas Bhaṭṭ. XV, 18),
to exhaust, tire, be hard upon, injure, cause to faint orᅠ perish MBh. Ṡak. III, 14 Vikr. VarBṛS. Sāh. ;
(with manas) to make desponding MBh. III, V ;
(irreg. Pot. glapet) to become cast down orᅠ desponding, 1650
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