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1 skálkur
[sg̊aul̥kʏr̬]m skálks, skálkar1) плут, проказник, шалун2) плут, мошенник, негодяй -
2 SKÁLKR
(-s, -ar), m.1) servant;2) rogue (ljúga sem skálkr).* * *m. [Ulf. skalks = δουλος, skalkinon = δουλεύειν, skalkinassus = δουλεία; A. S. scealc; Germ. schalk; the word remains in siniscalc, seneschal; mariscalc, mar-shall = a horse-groom]:—prop. a ‘slave,’ ‘servant;’ skálka þeirra er skjöld bera, Fas. i. (in a verse); but that sense is else lost.2. a rogue, yet with some notion of a ‘mocker,’ cp. skelkja and skálkheið, Dan. skalk-agtig; leiðr s., Clar.; ljúga sem skálkr, Rétt. 61, and so in mod. usage, Pass. 8. 19; skálka mark, a brand, 7. 13; skálka-pör, roguery. It is freq. in Germ. pr. names, as, Godi-scalk, whence mod. Icel. Gott-skalk, which appears in Icel. in the 15th century. -
3 sgalag
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4 sgolb
a splinter, Irish sgolb, Middle Irish scolb, a wattle, Welsh ysgolp, splinter, Breton skolp: *skolb-, root skel, skol, split (see sgoilt), fuller root skel-$$g; Greek $$G kolobós, stunted, $$G skóloy ( $$G skólopos), stake; Swed. skalks, a piece, also Gothic halks, halt, English shelf, spelk (Perrson Zeit.$$+ee 290 for Greek and Teutonic).
См. также в других словарях:
skalks — [akin to second element of Eng marshall] : servant. Deriv. skalkinassus service, skalkinon serve. Comp. gaskalki co servant … Gothic dictionary with etymologies
Gotische Grammatik — Die Grammatik der gotischen Sprache ist die älteste so gut wie vollständig bezeugte Grammatik einer germanischen Einzelsprache, dazu noch die einzige Grammatik aus dem ostgermanischen Sprachzweig. Sie ist hauptsächlich aus der Wulfilabibel… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Schalk — Den Schalk (oder Schelm) im Nacken (oder hinter den Ohren) haben: es hinter den Ohren haben (⇨ Ohr), ein Schalk sein und sich s nicht merken lassen. Die Wndg. bezieht sich auf einen Menschen, der gleichsam von einem kleinen schalkhaften Dämon… … Das Wörterbuch der Idiome
Earl marshal of England — Marshal Mar shal, n. [OE. mareschal, OF. mareschal, F. mar[ e]chal, LL. mariscalcus, from OHG. marah scalc (G. marschall); marah horse + scalc servant (akin to AS. scealc, Goth. skalks). F. mar[ e]chal signifies, a marshal, and a farrier. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Earl marshal of Scotland — Marshal Mar shal, n. [OE. mareschal, OF. mareschal, F. mar[ e]chal, LL. mariscalcus, from OHG. marah scalc (G. marschall); marah horse + scalc servant (akin to AS. scealc, Goth. skalks). F. mar[ e]chal signifies, a marshal, and a farrier. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
field marshal — Marshal Mar shal, n. [OE. mareschal, OF. mareschal, F. mar[ e]chal, LL. mariscalcus, from OHG. marah scalc (G. marschall); marah horse + scalc servant (akin to AS. scealc, Goth. skalks). F. mar[ e]chal signifies, a marshal, and a farrier. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Knight marshal — Marshal Mar shal, n. [OE. mareschal, OF. mareschal, F. mar[ e]chal, LL. mariscalcus, from OHG. marah scalc (G. marschall); marah horse + scalc servant (akin to AS. scealc, Goth. skalks). F. mar[ e]chal signifies, a marshal, and a farrier. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Marshal — Mar shal, n. [OE. mareschal, OF. mareschal, F. mar[ e]chal, LL. mariscalcus, from OHG. marah scalc (G. marschall); marah horse + scalc servant (akin to AS. scealc, Goth. skalks). F. mar[ e]chal signifies, a marshal, and a farrier. See {Mare}… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Marshal of the King's house — Marshal Mar shal, n. [OE. mareschal, OF. mareschal, F. mar[ e]chal, LL. mariscalcus, from OHG. marah scalc (G. marschall); marah horse + scalc servant (akin to AS. scealc, Goth. skalks). F. mar[ e]chal signifies, a marshal, and a farrier. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Marshal of the Queen's Bench — Marshal Mar shal, n. [OE. mareschal, OF. mareschal, F. mar[ e]chal, LL. mariscalcus, from OHG. marah scalc (G. marschall); marah horse + scalc servant (akin to AS. scealc, Goth. skalks). F. mar[ e]chal signifies, a marshal, and a farrier. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Seneschal — Sen es*chal, n. [OF. seneschal, LL. seniscalcus, of Teutonic origin; cf. Goth. sineigs old, skalks, OHG. scalch, AS. scealc. Cf. {Senior}, {Marshal}.] An officer in the houses of princes and dignitaries, in the Middle Ages, who had the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English