FELDR

FELDR
I)
(-ar, -ir), m. cloak.
II)
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.

An Icelandic-English dictionary. . 1874.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bräumer — Hansjörg Bräumer (* 1941) ist ein deutscher Theologe, Pastor und Autor. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Werke 3 Einzelnachweise 4 Weblinks // …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Ladejarl — ist eine Fürstendynastie der Wikinger Häuptlinge von Trondheim. Lade liegt in der Nähe des heutigen Trondheim. Die mächtigen Jarle von Lade spielten bis 1030 ein wichtige Rolle in der Politik Norwegens. Jarlen von Lade waren: Hákon Grjótgarðsson …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Список праиндоевропейских корней — Для улучшения этой статьи желательно?: Найти и оформить в виде сносок ссылки на авторитетные источники, подтверждающие написанное …   Википедия

  • Skandinavien — Skandinavien, Gesammtname der drei nordischen Reiche Dänemark, Schweden u. Norwegen nebst Island (s.d. a.). Dem Namen nach war S. schon den Alten bekannt, doch hielten sie die damit bezeichneten Ländereien für mehre große, von germanischen… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • pel-3a —     pel 3a     English meaning: to fold     Deutsche Übersetzung: “falten”     Material: α. plo as 2. composition part in adj. as Gk. ἁ πλός ‘simple, just”, δι πλός, δίπλαξ “ twofold “ (compare Arm. haɫ “Mal”), Lat. simplus, duplus, duplex,… …   Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

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