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opnast

  • 1 opnast

    см. opna

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > opnast

  • 2 opnast út á

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > opnast út á

  • 3 opnast

    • filmy

    Serbian-English dictionary > opnast

  • 4 opnast

    membraneous, membranous

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > opnast

  • 5 opnast skyndilega, vera hrundiî upp

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > opnast skyndilega, vera hrundiî upp

  • 6 opna

    v (acc) (-aði)
    otevřít
    Dyrnar opnast af sjálfu sér.

    Íslensk-tékknesk orðabók > opna

  • 7 burst open

    (to open suddenly or violently: The door burst open and she rushed in.) opnast skyndilega, vera hrundið upp

    English-Icelandic dictionary > burst open

  • 8 open on to

    ((of a door etc) to open towards: Our front door opens straight on to the street.) opnast út á

    English-Icelandic dictionary > open on to

  • 9 membraneous

    [membréinəs], American [mémbrənəs]
    adjective
    opnast, ko opna

    English-Slovenian dictionary > membraneous

  • 10 opna

    [ɔʰpna]
    I f opnu, opnur
    2) : разворот (книги, листа)
    II f opnaði
    1. vt
    открывать,раскрывать
    открываться, раскрываться

    Íslensk-Russian dictionary > opna

  • 11 ÁLFR

    (-s, -ar), m. elf, fairy (hóll er skamt heðan er álfar búa í).
    * * *
    s, m. [A. S. ælf, munt-ælfen, sæ-ælfen, wudu-ælfen, etc.; Engl. elf, elves, in Shakespeare ouphes are ‘fairies;’ Germ. alb and elfen, Erl- in Erlkönig (Göthe) is, according to Grimm, a corrupt form from the Danish Ellekonge qs. Elver-konge]; in the west of Icel. also pronounced álbr:
    I. mythically, an elf, fairy; the Edda distinguishes between Ljósálfar, the elves of light, and Dökkálfar, of darkness (the last not elsewhere mentioned either in mod. fairy tales or in old writers), 12; the Elves and Ases are fellow gods, and form a favourite alliteration in the old mythical poems, e. g. Vsp. 53, Hm. 144, 161, Gm. 4, Ls. 2, 13, Þkv. 7, Skm. 7, 17, Sdm. 18. In the Alvismál Elves and Dwarfs are clearly distinguished as different. The abode of the elves in the Edda is Álfheimar, fairy land, and their king the god Frey (the god of light), Edda 12; see the poem Gm. 12, Álfheim Frey gáfu í árdaga tívar at tannfé. In the fairy tales the Elves haunt the hills, hence their name Huldufólk, hidden people: respecting their origin, life, and customs, v. Ísl. Þjóðs. i. I sqq. In old writers the Elves are rarely mentioned; but that the same tales were told as at present is clear;—Hallr mælti, hvi brosir þú nú? þórhallr svarar, af því brosir ek, at margr hóll opnast ok hvert kvikindi býr sinn bagga bæði smá ok stór, ok gera fardaga (a foreboding of the introduction of Christianity), Fms. ii. 197, cp. landvættir; álfamenn, elves, Bs. i. 417, Fas. i. 313, 96; hóll einn er hér skamt í brott er álfar búa í, Km. 216: álfrek, in the phrase, ganga álfreka, cacare, means dirt, excrements, driving the elves away through contamination, Eb. 12, cp. Landn. 97, Fms. iv. 308, Bárð. ch. 4: álfröðull, elfin beam or light, a poët. name of the sun; álfavakir, elf-holes, the small rotten holes in the ice in spring-time in which the elves go a fishing; the white stripes in the sea in calm weather are the wakes of elfin fishing boats, etc.: medic. álfabruni is an eruption in the face, Fél. ix. 186: Ivar Aasen mentions ‘alvgust, alveblaastr, alveld,’ the breath, fire of elves (cp. St. Vitus’ dance or St. Anthony’s fire); ‘alvskot,’ a sort of cancer in the bone:—græti álfa, elfin tears, Hðm. I, is dubious; it may mean some flower with dew-drops glittering in the morning sun, vide s. v. glýstamr ( glee-steaming). Jamieson speaks of an elf’s cup, but elf tears are not noticed elsewhere; cp. Edda 39. In Sweden, where the worship of Frey prevailed, sacrifices, álfa-blót, were made to the elves, stóð húsfreyja í dyrum ok bað hann ( the guest) eigi þar innkoma, segir at þau ætti álfa blót, Hkr. ii. 124 (referring to the year 1018), cp. Korm. ch. 22.
    2. metaph., as the elves had the power to bewitch men, a silly, vacant person is in Icel. called álfr; hence álfalegr, silly; álfaskapr and álfaháttr, silly behaviour.
    II. in historical sense, the Norse district situated between the two great rivers Raumelfr and Gautelfr (Alhis Raumarum, et Gotharum) was in the mythical times called Álfheimar, and its inhabitants Álfar, Fas. i. 413, 384, 387, Fb. i. 23, vide also P. A. Munch, Beskrivelse over Norge, p. 7. For the compds v. above.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ÁLFR

  • 12 opna

    * * *
    I)
    (að), v. to open (hann lét o. hauginn);
    refl., opnast, to be opened.
    f. opening, crater.
    * * *
    1.
    að, [A. S. openjan, Germ. öffnen, etc.], to open; hann létt opna hauginn, Eg. 601; opna jörð til þess at grafa niðr lík, K. Þ. K.; þeir opnuðu merina, cut it up, Fs. 56: impers., sýndisk himinn opna, Hom. 57: reflex. to open, be opened, Grág. ii. 262; opnask haugrinn, Fb. i. 215; sárit opnaðisk, Fms. ix. 276; fjallit opnaðisk, Nj. 211; himinn opnaðisk, Niðrst. 3; jörð opnaðisk, 645. 64.
    2.
    u, f. an opening; hvíta-salt svá mikit umhverfis opnuna ( the crater), at klyfja mátti hesta af, Ann. 1341:—the two pages of an open book, erkibiskup leit skjótt á þá opnu sem upp flettisk, Safn i. 677; það stendr á þessari opnu. opnu-selr, m. a kind of seal, the mod. vöðu-selr, so called because it swims on its back (see opinn), Sks. 177.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > opna

  • 13 membranous

    * * *

    membranska

    English-Croatian dictionary > membranous

  • 14 filmy

    • koprenast; magličast; mrežast; mutan; opnast; pokriven tankom prevlakom; prevučen tankom pokožicom; tanan

    English-Serbian dictionary > filmy

  • 15 filmy

    adj (filmily [adv]) opnast, mrenast, paučinast, pokriven tankom kožicom, mutan (oči); tanak, nježan

    English-Croatian dictionary > filmy

  • 16 membraneous

    English-Croatian dictionary > membraneous

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