- SNOTR
- (acc. snotran), a. wise.* * *adj., the r is radical, fem. snotr, neut. snotrt; [Ulf. snotrs = σοφός; A. S. snotor = sapiens]:—wise, a word noticeable for its use in the old Hm. (where it is used of the ‘wise’ man, ú-snotr of the ‘fool’), Gr. σοφός, Lat. sapiens, cp. Hebr. הכם; ok með snotrum sitr, Hm. 5; snotrs manns hjarta, 54; til snotr, 55; hveim snotrum manni, 94; ó-snotr maðr, 23–26, 78, 160; meðal-snotr, 53–55; al-snotr, all-wise, 54; ráð-s., 63; otherwise of rare occurrence in old writers, snotr kona, Edda; ef hann vill snotr heita, Sks. 317; ósnotr, 449; Sturl. iii. 241,—lögðu menn á þat eigi fullan trúnað er hann sagði, þvíat Björn var nokkut snotr (ú-snotr?) ok svá nokkut grályndr kallaðr—is a dubious passage and prob. corrupt.II. in mod. usage snotr means neat, handsome; það er snoturt, hann er snotr.
An Icelandic-English dictionary. Richard Cleasby and Gudbrand Vigfusson. 1874.