EYKR

EYKR
(-jar, -ir), m. beast of draught.
* * *
m., pl. eykir, gen. eykia, [Swed. ök; Dan. ög; akin to ok, a yoke]:—a beast of draught; úlfalda ok eyki, Stj. 393; hross eðr eyk, Grág. i. 434; þat er einn e. má draga, ii. 362; þeir hvildu sik þar ok eyki sína, Eg. 586 (travelling in a sledge); eykja fóðr, fodder for eykr, N. G. L. i. 38: eykr includes oxen, horses, etc.,—eykjum, hestum ok uxum, cattle, whether horses or oxen, Fms. v. 249; eyk, uxa eðr hross, Jb. 52; uxa ok asna, þá sömu eyki …, Mar.; hefi ek öngva frétt af at nokkurr þeirra hafi leitt eyki Þórs (of Thor in his wain with the he-goats), Fb. i. 321: metaph., Bs. i. 294.
II. the passage Bs. i. 674—þar er þeir höfðu eykinn búit—ought to be read ‘eikjuna,’ vide eikja. eykja-gerfi, n. the harness of an eykr, Ýt. 10; jötuns-e., the giants’ e., i. e. a wild ox, poët., 14: in poetry ships are called the eykir of the sea-kings and the sea.

An Icelandic-English dictionary. . 1874.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Ongentheow — Illustration by Gerhard Munthe (1899) Ongentheow (Old English: Ongenþeow, Ongenþio, Ongendþeow; Swedish: Angantyr) (died ca. 515) was the name of a semi legendary Swedish king of the house of Scylfings, who appears in Old English sources. He is… …   Wikipedia

  • Kazlų Rūda airbase — Infobox Airport name = Kazlų Rūda nativename = nativename a = nativename r = image width = caption = IATA = ICAO = EYKR type = Military owner = operator = city served = location = Kazlų Rūda elevation f = 243 elevation m = 74 coordinates =… …   Wikipedia

  • Список аэропортов по коду ИКАО: E — Список аэропортов по коду ИКАО: A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z Формат… …   Википедия

  • i̯eu-2, i̯eu̯ǝ-, i̯eu̯-g- —     i̯eu 2, i̯eu̯ǝ , i̯eu̯ g     English meaning: to tie together, yoke     Deutsche Übersetzung: “verbinden”     Note: probably as 1. i̯eu “vermengen” from “in Bewegung place” evolved; s. also i̯eu dhand i̯eu ni .     Material: O.Ind. yáuti,… …   Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”