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mǫrðr

  • 1 mörður

    [mörðʏr̬]
    m marðar, merðir

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > mörður

  • 2 MORÐ

    n. murder (kallið þér þat eigi m., at drepa menn um nætr?).
    * * *
    n. [Ulf. maurþr = φόνος; A. S. morð and morðar; Engl. murther, murder; Germ. and Dan. mord; cp. Lat. mort-is]:—a murder, Fær. 187; in ancient times murder (morð) and manslaughter (víg) are distinguished; if the killer, after the deed, had immediately, at the next or at least at the third house, confessed what he had done (lýsa vígi, víg-lýsing, N. G. L. i. 6l), the deed was manslaughter (víg), and the doer was liable to indictment according to the law, but the deed might, with the consent of the prosecutors and relations of the slain, be atoned by weregild. On the other hand, if the víg-lýsing either did not take place or was stealthily performed (Glúm. ch. 27), the deed was murder; and the killer was called morð-vargr, and was out of the pale of the law; en þat er morð ef maðr leynir eða hylr hræ ok gengr eigi í gegn, Grág. (Kb.) i. 154; drepa mann á morð, N. G. L. i. 158; hence the phrase to kill a man and then murder him, i. e. conceal the deed. In one instance the distinction is made threefold, viz. víg, laun-víg, and morð, i. e. laun-víg or secret manslaughter, if no víg-lýsing took place, but the perpetrator left the weapon in the wound or some other evidence that he was the culprit, en þat vóru kölluð launvíg en ekki morð, er menn létu vápn eptir í beninni standa, Gísl. 22. To slay a man asleep or feloniously was also called morð; so also to put a man to death during the night, nátt-víg eru morð-víg, Eg. 417; kallit ér þat eigi morð-verk at drepa menn um nætr? Ó. H. 117; heiti þat níðings verk eða morð ef menn drepask um nætr, Fms. vii. 296: burying alive also was morð, K. Þ. K. 26, passim. For the formula of the víg-lýsing see Grág. Vsl. ch. 20. In poets morð is used = slaughter, thus, morð-álfr, -bráðr, -heggr, etc. = warriors; morð-bál, -linnr, -röðull, -ský, etc. = weapons, Lex. Poët.
    COMPDS: morðseiðr, morðför, morðgjarn, morðgyðja, morðjárn, morðráð, morðvargr, morðverk, morðvíg.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > MORÐ

  • 3 MOR

    (gen. mós, pl. móar), m. moor, heath, barren moorland.
    * * *
    n., spelt morð; hafa morð fjár, Al. 123, Hom. (St.), MS. 623. 21, where it is spelt morg = morþ:—a swarm, prop. a swarm of ants (akin to maurr); mor af mýi, fiski, síld, a swarm of flies, shoal of herrings:— an atom, svo lítið mor.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > MOR

  • 4 morð

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > morð

  • 5 MÖRÐR

    (gen. marðar, dat. merði), m. marten (cf. marðskinn).
    * * *
    m., gen. marðar, dat. merði, [Engl. marten; Germ. marder; Dan. maard]:—a marten; in Edda (Gl.) mörðr is wrongly put among the names of rams, for the marten is not known in Icel.
    II. a pr. name, Landn., Nj.; from that Saga originated in popular usage, by way of metonomy, mörðr = a backslider (as a ‘Judas’). marðar-skinn, n. a marten’s skin; see marðskinn.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > MÖRÐR

  • 6 MÓR

    (gen. mós, pl. móar), m. moor, heath, barren moorland.
    * * *
    m., gen. mós, dat. mó, pl. móar, [akin to Engl. moor; Norse Moe]:—a moor, heath, mostly used of a barren moorland, grown only with ling; en biskup dragnaði um grjót ok móa, Sturl. ii. 50; tekr Skeggi á rás upp eptir móunum ok grípr þar upp malinn, Grett. 93: freq. in local names, Mór, Móar ( Moe in Norway), Landn.; Mó-berg: in pr. names, referring to the hue, Mó-gils, Mó-eiðr, id.
    II. peat, for fuel; skera mó, brenna mó, freq. in mod. usage; mó-tak, n. a peat-field: mó-skurðr, m. cutting peat: mó-gröf, f. a peat-pit: mó-færsla, u, f. carrying peat, Vm. 136: in old writers torf, q. v.
    III. in compds, as mó-hella, mó-berg (q. v.), tufa: and hence of colour, mó-kollr, mó-brúnn, mó-rauðr, q. v.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > MÓR

  • 7 mor

    [mɔ:r̬]
    n mors
    3) масса, множество

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > mor

  • 8 mór

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > mór

  • 9 mör

    [mö:r̬]
    m mörs, mörvar

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > mör

  • 10 morð-gyðja

    u, f. a murderess, Grett. 117.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > morð-gyðja

  • 11 morð-ráð

    n. pl. schemes of murders, N. G. L. i. 254.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > morð-ráð

  • 12 morðs-eiðr

    m. an oath of compurgation in a case of murder, N. G. L. i. 62.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > morðs-eiðr

  • 13 morð

    Old Norse-ensk orðabók > morð

  • 14 mǫrðr

    m. -u-, gen. marðar, dat. merði
    куница (ср. marðskinn)

    Old Norse-ensk orðabók > mǫrðr

  • 15 mór

    m (-s, -ar)
    hrbolatá suchá půda

    Íslensk-tékknesk orðabók > mór

  • 16 mör-landi

    a, m. (mör-lendingr, m., Bs. i. 222, v. l.; mör-fjandi, m. = suet-fiend, Fms. vii. 35), a suet-man, a nickname which the Norsemen used to give to the Icelanders in consequence of their supporting themselves chiefly by their flocks and herds, viltú, mörlandi, þú ert mör-biskup, Bs. i. 357, 811, see also Fms. iii. 154, vii. 114, 118, Ísl. ii. 39 (read mörlandi).

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > mör-landi

  • 17 morðingi

    [mɔrðiηʲg̊ʲɪ]
    m morðingja, morðingjar

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > morðingi

  • 18 morðingi

    m., косв. morðingja, pl. morðingjar

    Old Norse-ensk orðabók > morðingi

  • 19 morðverk

    n. murder (náttvíg eru morðvíg).

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > morðverk

  • 20 morðvíg

    n. murder (náttvíg eru morðvíg).

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > morðvíg

См. также в других словарях:

  • MOR — or MOR may refer to: In publications: Mathematics of Operations Research, a quarterly publication on the mathematics of operations research. In mechanics: Modulus of rupture, the material s ability to resist deformation under load. In media: MOR… …   Wikipedia

  • Mor — Mór Hilfe zu Wappen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mór — Mór …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • mor — interj. (De obicei repetat) Cuvânt care redă mormăitul ursului. – Onomatopee. Trimis de ana zecheru, 03.06.2004. Sursa: DEX 98  mor/mor mór interj. Trimis de siveco, 10.08.2004. Sursa: Dicţionar ortografic  MOR interj. (se foloseşte, de obicei… …   Dicționar Român

  • Mór — Administration …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Mōr — *Mōr germ., Maskulinum: nhd. Mohr; ne. Moor; Rekontruktionsbasis: anfrk., as., ahd.; Interferenz: Lehnwort lat. Maurus; Etymologie: s. lat …   Germanisches Wörterbuch

  • mor´al|iz´er — mor|al|ize «MR uh lyz, MOR », verb, ized, iz|ing. –v.i. to think, talk, or write about questions of right and wrong: »... no one can moralize better after a misfortune has taken place (Washington Irving). –v.t. 1. to point out the lesson or inner …   Useful english dictionary

  • MOR — steht als Abkürzung für: Masters of Rap, Berliner Rapgruppe; Medizinaloberrat; Mittelozeanischer Rücken; Middle of the Road, eine schottische Popband; Monsters of Rock, eine Rockmusik Festivalreihe bzw. eine gleichnamige Musikfernsehsendung. Mor… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • mor — ● mor nom masculin (danois mor) Type d humus brut très acide, dont la matière organique reste peu transformée, par suite d un défaut d activité biologique (climat trop froid ou roche mère trop acide). [À ce type d humus, dont la terre de bruyère… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • mor — |ó| adj. 1. Maior. 2. Que é chefe de (ex.: monteiro mor, chefe dos monteiros).   ‣ Etimologia: redução de maior mor |ô| s. m. 1.  [Informal] Amor. 2. por mor de: por causa de.   ‣ Etimologia: redução de amor …   Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa

  • mor|ro — «MOR oh; Spanish MR roh», noun, plural mor|ros «MOR ohz; Spanish. MR rohs». a round hill, hillock, or promontory. ╂[< Spanish morro round object] …   Useful english dictionary

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