- BRENNA
- burn* * *I)(brenn; brann, brunnum; brunninn), v.1) to burn with a flame (logi, ljós, eldr, kerti brennr);2) to be consumed by fire (á Flugumýri brann fé mikit);nú breðr (= brennr) víðara en hann vildi, the fire spreads wider than he wished;brenna inni, to perish by fire;brenna upp, to be burnt up (á þeiri nátt brann upp allt Danavirki);hlutr e-s brennr við, one gets the worst of it;brann brátt þeirra hlutr við, it soon grew too hot for them;rautt mun fyrir brenna, mun nökkut fyrir brenna, things will brighten up or improve.II)(-da, -dr), v.1) to burn (brenna bál);2) to destroy by fire (brenna bœ, hof, skip at köldum kolum);brenna e-n inni, to burn one to death in his house;brenna e-t upp, to burn up;3) to cauterize (as a surgical operation);brenna e-n við bölvi, to burn one to cure his malady;brenna e-m díla, to burn spots on one’s back; fig. to brand one’s back;brenna e-m illan díla, to inflict a severe injury upon one;4) to produce by burning (brenna e-t til líms);brenna kol, to burn wood for charcoal;brenna salt, to produce salt by burning (sea-weed);5) to purify (silver or gold) by burning;brent silfr, pure silver (eyrir brendr, mörk brend).III)f. the burning of a house or person (þá er brenna var á Flugumýri; Njáls brenna).* * *an old obsol. form brinna; pret. brann, 2nd pers. brant, mod. branst; pl. brunnu; sup. brunnit; pres. brenn, 3rd pers. brennr; old breðr, Grág. ii. 295, Fms. vii. 20 (in a verse); brenn (dropping the r), Hm. 56; with the neg. suffix, brennr-at (non urit), 153, [Ulf. brinnan; A. S. byrnan; Early Engl. to ‘brenn;’ Germ. brennen; the strong form is almost obsolete in Germ.]:—to burn:1. of a light; þeir þóttust sjá fjögr ljós b., Nj. 118, Fas. i. 340; hrælog brunnu (blazed) af vápnum þeirra, Bs. i. 509: of a candle, to burn out, eigi lengr en kerti þat brennr, Fas. i. 341, 342; cp. Fms. viii. 276.2. to be consumed by fire; kyrtillinn var brunninn, Fms. xi. 420; nú breðr viðara en hann vildi, the fire spreads wider than he would, Grág. l. c.β. of a volcano; er hér brann hraunit, er nú stöndu vér á, Bs. i. 22; brann þá Borgarhraun, Landn. 78, Ann. several times.γ. b. upp, to be burnt up. Grág. i. 459, K. Þ. K. 42; b. inni, to perish by fire, Gþl. 252, Nj. 198, 200.δ. to fester, Fms. xi. 288.ε. to be scolded, Eb. 198; skulu grónir grautar dílarnir þeir er þú brant, 200.3. metaph. in the phrase, e-t or e-s hlutr brennr við, one’s lot or portion of meat gets burnt in the cooling, one gets the worst of it; broth ‘brennr við,’ is burnt: ortu bændr þegar á um bardagann (they made an onslaught), en þó brann brátt þeirra hlutr við, but it grew soon too hot for them, Fms. iv. 250; Sigurðr kvað sitt skyldu við brenna, quoth Sigurd, he would get the worst of it, i. e. it would never do, Fær. 236: the phrase, e-t brennr fyrir, or e-t rautt brennr fyrir, of bright hopes, rautt mun fyrir b. ok til virðingar snúa, Fs. 68; mun enn nokkut fyrir b. er þér komit heim, Fas. iii. 81.
An Icelandic-English dictionary. Richard Cleasby and Gudbrand Vigfusson. 1874.