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  • 1 òumall, òumalfingur

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > òumall, òumalfingur

  • 2 òumlungur

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > òumlungur

  • 3 fletta

    * * *
    (-tta, -ttr), v.
    1) to strip (f. e-n klæðum or af klæðum); f. e-t af e-m, to strip (something) off one;
    2) to strip, plunder.
    * * *
    tt, to strip; fletta klæðum, Nj. 209, Fms. viii. 77, 264; fletta e-n af brynju, vii. 227, viii. 121; fletta e-u af e-m, to strip ( the clothes) off, iii. 125, Al. 89: metaph., Th. 24.
    β. to strip, plunder, Sturl. ii. 208, Fms. ix. 383, Stj. 282; cp. fé-fletta.
    2. the phrase, fletta bók (dat.), to turn the leaves of a book, (mod.)

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > fletta

  • 4 flétta

    * * *
    (-tta, -ttr), v.
    1) to strip (f. e-n klæðum or af klæðum); f. e-t af e-m, to strip (something) off one;
    2) to strip, plunder.
    * * *
    u, f. a braid, string; hár-f., plaited hair.
    COMPDS: fléttuband, fléttugrjót, fléttuskepta.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > flétta

  • 5 FLÉTTA

    * * *
    (-tta, -ttr), v.
    1) to strip (f. e-n klæðum or af klæðum); f. e-t af e-m, to strip (something) off one;
    2) to strip, plunder.
    * * *
    tt or að, [Lat. plectere; Ulf. flehtan; Germ. flechten; Dan. flette; the word is scarcely borrowed from the Germ.]:—to plait; hár fléttað, Karl. 335: reflex., hárið fléttask niðr á bringu, the hair fell down in braids on the breast, 226.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > FLÉTTA

  • 6 òumalnögl

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > òumalnögl

  • 7 ÞUMALL

    m., dat. þumli; [A. S. þûma; O. H. G. dûmo; Engl. thumb; Dutch duim; Swed. tumma; Dan. tomme]:—the thumb, of a glove; í þumlinum.
    COMPDS: þumal-alin or -öln, f. a thumb-ell, Grág. i. 500, N. G. L. i. 246 (see alin). þumal-fingr, m. the thumb-finger, Grág. i. 497, K. Þ. K. 10, Fb. ii. 370, Fms. xi. 367, N. G. L. i. 339. þumal-tá, f. the ‘thumb-toe,’ the great toe, Nj. 245, Stj. 310.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ÞUMALL

  • 8 FINGR

    (gen. fingrar or fingrs; pl. fingr), m. finger (fingr digrir); rétta e-m f., to point one’s finger at.
    * * *
    m., gen. fingrar, mod. fingrs; dat. fingri; pl. fingr; a neut. fingr occurs in O. H. L. 73, 74, which gender is still found in Swed. dialects; the acc. pl. is in conversation used as fem., an Icel. says allar fingr, not alla fingr: [Goth. figgrs; A. S. finger, etc.; whereas Lat. digitus and Gr. δάκτυλος etymologically answer to Icel. tá, Engl. toe, Germ. zehe, a finger of the foot]:—a finger, Grág. i. 498, Hkr. ii. 380, 384, Magn. 518, passim: the names of the fingers—þumal-fingr, the thumb; vísi-f., the index finger, also called sleiki-f., lick-finger; langa-töng, long-prong; græði-f., leech-finger, also, but rarely, called baug-f., digitus annuli; litli-f., the little finger. Sayings or phrases:—playing with one’s fingers is a mark of joy or happiness—leika fingrum (Rm. 24), or leika við fingr sér (sína), Fms. iv. 167, 172, vii. 172, Orkn. 324, mod. leika við hvern sinn fingr; also spila fingra, id., Fbr. 198; vita e-ð upp á sinar tíu fingr, to know a thing on one’s ten fingers, i. e. have at one’s fingers’ ends; fetta fingr útí e-t, to find fault with; rétta e-m fingr, digito monstrare, Grett. 117; sjá ekki fingra sinna skil, not to be able to distinguish one’s fingers, of blindness, Bs. i. 118: other phrases are rare and of foreign origin, e. g. sjá í gegnum fingr við e-n, to shut one’s eyes to a thing, etc.; fingr digrir, thick fingers, of a clown, Rm. 8; but mjó-fingraðr, taper-fingered, epithet of a lady, 36; fingra-mjúkr, nimble-fingered; fingrar-þykkr, a finger thick, Al. 165; fingrar gómr, a finger’s end, Fs. 62; fingra staðr, the print of the fingers, Symb. 59; fingrar breidd, a finger’s breadth. In the Norse law (N. G. L. i. 172) the fingers are taxed, from the thumb at twelve ounces, to the little finger at one ounce—not so in the curious lawsuit recorded in Sturl. i. ch. 18–27. Also a measure, a finger’s breadth, Nj. 27, cp. MS. 732. 5: arithm. any number under ten, Alg. 362: botan., skolla-fingr, a kind of fern, lycopodium. fingra-járn, n. a ‘finger-iron,’ a thimble (?), Dipl. v. 18. fingr-hæð, f. a finger’s height, as measure.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > FINGR

  • 9 GREIP

    (pl. greipr), f. the space between the thumb and the other fingers (kom blóð á hönd þóri ok rann upp á greipina); fig., koma, ganga í greipr e-m, to fall into one’s clutches.
    * * *
    f., pl. greipr, [A. S. grâp], the space between the thumb and the other fingers, a grip, grasp, Edda 110; at hin hægri greip spenni um hinn vinstra úlflið, Sks. 291; ok rann upp á greipina, Fms. v. 85; þrekligar greipr, Sd. 147; því næst brestr fram ór bjarginu greip eigi smáleit, Bs. ii. 111: metaph., ganga í greipr e-m, to fall into one’s clutches, Fs. 37, Fms. vi. 210; meir fyrir þat at vér vórum þá komnir í greipr honum, Orkn. 88; ganga ór greipum e-s, to slip from one’s grasp; spenna greipr, to clasp the hands: the phrase, láta greipr sópa, um e-t, to make a clean sweep, Grett. 127: the name of a giantess, Edda. ☞ Icel. distinguish between greip and neip (qs. gneip, the interval between the other fingers).

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > GREIP

  • 10 tuttr

    * * *
    and tottr (q. v.), a nursery word, a tom-thumb, cp. túta; tuttr litli, in the lullaby song of the giantess, Fas. ii. 234; cp. totr and tutr, Edda ii. 496: the word has therefore no relation to stuttr, like telpa qs. stelpa.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > tuttr

  • 11 FELDR

    I)
    (-ar, -ir), m. cloak.
    pp. fitted;
    vera vel (illa) feldr til e-s, to be well (ill) fitted for a thing; neut., þér er ekki felt at, it is not for thee to.
    * * *
    m., gen. feldar, pl. feldir, a cloak worn by the ancients, esp. one lined with fur; hvítr-f., a white cloak, Fbr. 145 sqq.; rauð-f., a red cloak, Landn. (a nickname); grá-f., a grey cloak, Hkr. i. 176; skinn-f., a skin cloak, Orkn. 326 (in a verse); bjarn-f., q. v., a bear-skin cloak; röggvar-f., a woollen cloak, Grett. 114; varar-f., a common cloak; loð-f., a shaggy cloak, a fur cloak, = loði; blá-f., a blue cloak, N. G. L. i. 74; feldr fimm alna í skaut, a cloak measuring five ells square, Korm. 86; a feld four ells long and two ells broad, Grág. i. 500, was in trade the usual size, but here the ell is a ‘thumb ell,’ measuring only about sixteen inches; stutt-f., a short cloak, Fms. vii. 152 (a nickname); feldr, kápa, and skikkja seem to be synonymous, cp. Ls. ch. 14, 15, Glúm. ch. 3, 8, Grett. ch. 23, Lv. ch. 17. Tac. Germ. ch. 17—‘tegumen omnibus sagum, fibulâ, aut, si desit, spinâ consertum;’ the cloaks were often made of (or lined with) costly furs, Glúm. ch. 6; breiða feld á höfuð sér, to wrap the head in a cloak, Nj. 164, Kristni S. ch. 11, Fms. vi. 43 (Sighvat), as a token of deep thinking: feldar-dálkr, m. a cloak-pin, Hkr., vide dálkr; feldar-röggvar, f. pl. the patches or ‘ragged’ hairs on the outside of a cloak, Lv. 55, cp. Grág. i. 500; feldar-skaut, n. (-blað, n., Finnb. 342), a cloak’s skirt, Fb. i. 416; feldar-slítr, n. pl. the tatters of a cloak, Grett. The etymology of feldr is uncertain, scarcely from Lat. pellis, but rather from falda, to fold, wrap; even Tacitus, l. c., makes a distinction between the ‘sagulum’ (= feldr) and ‘ferarum pelles,’ the latter being a mark of more savage habits, such as that of the berserkers; feldr is never used of a woman’s cloak (möttull, skikkja); the passage Fm. 43 is corrupt: the phrase, það er ekki með feldi, it is not right, something is wrong, is a corrupt form instead of með felldu, part. from fella, q. v.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > FELDR

  • 12 laski

    a, m. a flaw, fissure in wood.
    II. the wrist-piece of a gauntlet beneath the thumb, (opp. to ló or lóð = the finger part); the phrase, á ló og laski! The foreman of a fishing-boat divides the catch of fish into two heaps, then throws a glove between these heaps, and turning his face away shouts, á ló og laski! whereupon each man of the crew has, in his turn, to choose either the ló or the laski, and take his share according to the side to which the laski or the ló points.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > laski

  • 13 nauðungar-maðr

    m.; in the phrase, vera e-s n., to be under another person’s thumb, yield him forced obedience, Ld. 170, Fms. i. 75.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > nauðungar-maðr

  • 14 SPENNA

    * * *
    I)
    (-ta, -tr), v.
    1) to span, clasp (s. sverð báðum höndum); hon spennti hringinn á hönd honum, she clasped the ring round his wrist; s. e-u um sik, s. sik e-u, to gird oneself with, buckle on (hann spennti sik megingjörðum); s. af sér beltinu, to unclasp the belt;
    2) to clasp the hands round one’s neck, = s. höndum um háls e-m (þykki þér betra at s. karlsdóttur);
    3) to clasp, catch, capture (prestr nökkurr gekk á land; Birkibeinar spenntu hann); harðliga spenntr, in hard straits;
    4) to spend (eptir ár liðit skal ek segja þér, hvat þú spennir);
    5) s. boga, to draw a bow.
    * * *
    t, [A. S. spannan], to span, clasp; s. sverð báðum höndum, Fms. viii. 363; spenna árarnar fjórir hverja, 384; á langskipunum spenntu tveir eina ár, ix. 310; spenntu tveir hverja ár, 303, v. l.
    2. to span; lín svá mikit at spennt fengi um mesta fingri, to span with the thumb and the middle finger, Ó. H.; hjálm á höfði enn ekki spennt ( clasped) kinnbjörgunum, Grett. 118; spennt gullhlaði at höfði sér, Fms. ii. 264; s. um sik beltinu, xi. 272; Egill spennti gullhring á hverja hönd honum, Eg. 300; ok er hann spennir þeim um sik, Edda 15; þeir spenntu næfrum at fötleggjum sér. Fms. vii. 320; hann hafði spennt af sér ( unclasped) beltinn, xi. 290; spenn af mér belti ok knífinn, iv. 27; s. höndum um háls e-m, to clasp the hands round one’s neck, Ísl. ii. 343; hann spennti um hann stúfunum, Gullþ. 59; s. karls dóttur, Fas. i. 50; prestr nokkurr gékk á land, Birkibeinar spenntu hann, clasped, caught him, Fms. viii. 358; harðliga spenntr, in hard straits, Grett. 158 A: spenna boga, to draw a bow, Þiðr. 39.
    II. to spend, enjoy; meiri Sæmd en hann hefði fyrr því lika spennt, Th. 18; eptir ár liðit skal ek segja þér hvat þu spennir, Fms. xi. 423; upp spenna góz e-s, N. G. L. iii. 245.
    III. = spenja, Fms. ix. 262, v. l.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > SPENNA

  • 15 SPÖNN

    I)
    (gen. spánar, pl. spænir or spœnir, acc. spánu or spónu), m.
    1) chip, shaving (alla spánu báru þeir at skálanum, slógu síðan eld í allt saman); brjóta skip í spán, to have one’s ship broken to pieces (þeir brutu skipit í spán); brotna í spán, to be dashed to pieces (skipit brotnaði í spán);
    2) target (setja spán í bakka);
    3) ornament on a warship (only in pl.; cf. ennispænir);
    4) divining chip, used at sacrifices (féll honum þá svá s. sem hann mundi eigi lengi lifa);
    m. = spánn.
    * * *
    f., gen. spannar, [A. S. span, sponn; Engl. span]:—a span. (from the end of the thumb to the end of the middle finger is called lang-spönn or ‘long-span;’ but that to the end of the fore-finger a stutt-spönn or minni spönn, ‘short-span’); varð þat ekki fjarri hinnar minni spannar langt, Bs. i. 387; spannar ( a span long) fram frá hepti, Eb. 250; tveggja spanna digra, Bær. 16; ekki meirr en alin eða spönn, Bs. ii. 168; þat var spannar breitt, Fs. 51: spjót spannar langt, N. G. L. i. 44.
    II. spann, a pail, Rétt. 2. 10, B. K.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > SPÖNN

  • 16 tottr

    m. [Dan. tommel-tot = tom-thumb], a nickname, Sturl., Fms., of a dwarfish person.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > tottr

  • 17 þumli

    a, m. a ‘tom-thumb,’ a nickname, Sturl. ii. 153.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > þumli

  • 18 þumlungr

    m. the thumb of a glove; hanzka-þ., Ls. 60, Edda 29.
    2. an inch, Symb. 59, Grág. ii. 193 (Kb.); einn þ., tveir þ., freq. in mod. usage.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > þumlungr

  • 19 nauðungarmaðr

    m., vera nauðungarmaðr e-s, to be under another person’s thumb.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > nauðungarmaðr

  • 20 þulniungr

    (-s, -ar), m.
    1) the thumb (of a glove);
    2) inch.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > þulniungr

См. также в других словарях:

  • Thumb — Thumb, n. [OE. thombe, thoumbe, [thorn]ume, AS. [thorn][=u]ma; akin to OFries. th[=u]ma, D. duim, G. daumen, OHG. d[=u]mo, Icel. [thorn]umall, Dan. tommelfinger, Sw. tumme, and perhaps to L. tumere to swell. [root]56. Cf. {Thimble}, {Tumid}.] The …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • thumb — [thum] n. [ME (with unhistoric b) < OE thuma, akin to Ger daume(n) < IE base * tēu , to swell, increase > L tumor: basic sense, “enlarged finger”] 1. the short, thick digit of the human hand that is nearest the wrist and is opposable to… …   English World dictionary

  • thumb — ► NOUN ▪ the short, thick first digit of the hand, set lower and apart from the other four and opposable to them. ► VERB 1) press, touch, or indicate with one s thumb. 2) turn over (pages) with one s thumb. 3) (thumbed) (of a book s pages) worn… …   English terms dictionary

  • Thumb — Thumb, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Thumbed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Thumbing}.] 1. To handle awkwardly. Johnson. [1913 Webster] 2. To play with the thumbs, or with the thumbs and fingers; as, to thumb over a tune. [1913 Webster] 3. To soil or wear with the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • Thumb — Thumb, v. i. To play with the thumb or thumbs; to play clumsily; to thrum. [1913 Webster] [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • thumb — index peruse Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • thumb — UK US /θʌm/ noun [C] ● get/be given the thumbs down Cf. get/be given the thumbs down ● get/be given the thumbs up Cf. get/be given the thumbs up …   Financial and business terms

  • Thumb — For other uses, see Thumb (disambiguation). Thumb The Thumb. Latin pollex, digitus primus, digitus I Artery …   Wikipedia

  • thumb — [[t]θʌ̱m[/t]] thumbs, thumbing, thumbed 1) N COUNT Your thumb is the short thick piece on the side of your hand next to your four fingers. She bit the tip of her left thumb, not looking at me. 2) N COUNT The thumb of a glove is the part which a… …   English dictionary

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