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1 òunnlega
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2 þunn-sleginn
part. thinly-beaten, thinly-mounted, Hkr. iii. 16. -
3 þunnsleginn
pp. thinly beaten, thinly mounted. -
4 BYGÐ
f.1) colonization (frá Íslands bygð);2) abode, habitation; setja, hefja bygð sína es staðar, to fix one’s abode in a place; fœra bygð sína, to remove; banna (lofa, leyfi) em bygð, to forbid (allow) one to settle in a place;3) inhabited land or district, opp. to ‘úbygðir’, deserts.* * *f. [búa, byggja]I. gener. habitation:1. a settling one’s abode, colonisation; Íslands b., colonisation of Iceland, Íb. (begin.); Grænlands b., id.2. residence, abode; var þeirra b. ekki vinsæl, Ld. 136; the phrase, fara bygð, or bygðum, to remove one’s house and home, change one’s abode, Grág. i. 457, Nj. 25, 151; færa b. sína, to remove, Fas. ii. 281; banna, lofa e-m bygð, to forbid or allow one’s residence, Grág. l. c.; hitta b. e-s, abode, home, Band. 10: metaph., Hom. 16.II. inhabited land, opp. to úbygðir, deserts; but also opp. to mountains, wild woods, and the like, where there are no human dwellings: bygð thus denotes the dwellings and the whole cultivated neighbourhood; thus in old Greenland there was Eystri and Vestri bygð, the Eastern and Western colony, and úbygðir, deserts, viz. the whole Eastern side of this polar land, cp. Landn. 105, Antt. Amer., and Grönl. Hist. Mind, i-iii. In Norway distinction is made between bygðir and sætr, Fms. i. 5. Icel. say, snjór ofan í b., when the mountains are covered with snow, but the lowland, the inhabited shore, and the bottom of the dales are free; í Noregi er lítil b. ok þó sundrlaus, i. e. Norway is thinly peopled, Fms. iv. 140, viii. 200, 202, 203, Eg. 68, 229, Orkn. 8: spec. = county = hérað, í b. þeirri er Heggin heitir, Fms. ix. 232; b. þeirri er Strönd heitir, 358; heima í bygðum, Gþl. 34; miklar bygðir ( great inhabited districts) vóru inn í landit, Fms. i. 226.COMPDS: bygðarfleygr, bygðarfólk, bygðarlag, bygðarlagsmaðr, bygðarland, bygðarleyfi, bygðarlýðr, bygðarmenn, bygðarrómr, bygðarstefna. -
5 fá-bygðr
part. few, i. e. thinly, peopled, Glúm. 359. -
6 fá-klæddr
part. thinly clad, Grett. 141. -
7 fá-mennr
older form fá-meðr, mod. fá-menntr, adj. having few men, few followers, Fas. i. 25, Fs. 71, Nj. 95, Fms. vii. 250: compar., fámennari, iii. 18; fámeðri, Hkr. ii. 22.β. neut., fámennt, thinly peopled, solitary; f. og danfligt, Lv. 22: cp. the Icel. phrase, hér er fámennt og góðmennt, here are few but good people. -
8 glæ-napask
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9 HLÝJA
* * *(hlý, hlýða, hlúit), v. to cover, shelter (hlýrat henni börkr né barr).* * *(mod. hlúa), pres. hlýr, pret. hløði (mod. hlúði), cp. tøði from týja; part. hlúð:—prop. to cover, shelter, with dat.; hlýrat henni börkr né barr, Hm. 49; to this belongs the poët. pret., serkir hløðut þeim = Homer’s οἱ ἤρκεσε θώρηξ, Il. xv. 529 (cp. οὐδ ἤ. θ., xiii. 371, gave them no shelter against the blow), Edda i. 418; in mod. usage, hlúa að e-m, to cover with clothes (Lat. fovere), to make one warm and snug; hér er sjór kallaðr hlér, þvíat hann hlýr allra minzt, Skálda 198; hlúðu að þér betr, þú hefr ekki hlúð vel að þér, thou art too thinly clad. -
10 klæða
(-dda, -ddr), v. to clothe; klæða sik, to dress oneself;refl., klæðast, to dress oneself, put on one’s clothes, in the morning (síðan stóðu þeir upp ok klæddust).* * *d, to clothe; klæða sik, to dress oneself, Nj. 171; klæða nökðan, kalna, Hom., O. H. L. 22; afklæddi hann sik ( he put off) sínum kyrtli, Stj. 466; í óttu fyrir dag stóð hann upp ok klæddi sik, Edda 28.II. reflex. to dress oneself, to rise in the morning; afklæðask, to undress, Fms. x. 16; klæðask pells-klæðum, Ó. H. 31; mál mun vera upp at standa ok klæðask, Edda 30; hvern dag er þeir hara klæðsk, 25; en í dagan stóð Ýmir upp ok klæddisk, 35; Snorri stóð upp ok bað menn klæðask, ok er þeir vóru klæddir, Eb. 188: en síðan klæðisk hann ok húskarlar hans ok fór ofan til vatns, Ó. H. 62; síðan stóðu þeir upp ok klæddusk, Ld. 44.III. part. klæddr, clad, dressed; á morgun er þú ert klæddr, Fs. 110; svart-klæddr, clad in black; hvít-k., clad in white; rauð-k.; þunn-k., thinly clad; al-klæddr, quite dressed; spari-k., in one’s ‘spared’ clothes, i. e. in one’s best clothes. -
11 klæð-fár
adj. ‘few-clad,’ thinly clad, Bs. i. 442, Bret. ch. 34. -
12 þunn-bygðr
part. thinly inhabited, Sks. 42. -
13 þunn-býlt
n. part. thinly peopled with farms, Eg. 229. -
14 þunn-skipaðr
part. thinly-manned, Fms. viii. 316, Eg. 362; þunnskipaðra á húsunum, Sturl. ii. 10. -
15 þunn-vaxinn
part. thinly-waxen, slight built, Geisli. -
16 fábygðr
pp. thinly peopled. -
17 fáklæddr
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18 klæðfár
a. thinly clad. -
19 þunnbygðr
pp. thinly inhabited. -
20 þunnbýlt
a. n. thinly peopled with farms.
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