Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/135

Rh  (inner and outer) Akkel” , now the name of fishing-places. — ǫxl (axl-),, a) shoulder, b) crag. — As the word (the name) in mostly appears in  (of two or more hillocks ), is doubtless derived from the form =  axlar, ; de = *axlarnar +  —    and *, aklin,, peevish, grumpy person. Edm. Not further confirmed. Can be referred either to alka, , to irritate; to quarrel, with change of l and k, or to “hakke- (hakkenyn)” of a peevish, grumpy woman.  -aks [aks],, (ears of corn), in the ,   al [āl], ali [āli],, 1) to feed; rear; support, esp. to feed an animal at home (in the house) in winter, in the form : to a. a lamb, a grice [‘pig’]; the substantives compounded with -. 2) to entice an animal to the house by fondling it and giving it food; to accustom an animal to have the run of the house, in the form and  ; du’s [‘has’]  de coo (lamb, bird, ) to de hoose or upo dy hand; also of persons: to entice one by kindness; to accustom one to have the run of one’s house. ala, , to feed; rear; support; in also entice to the house, “ala” inter alia: to entice with food, bait.  alakadi,, see. alamuti [ā·lamut·i],, stormy petrel (sea-bird), from, a) small being, b) stormy petrel. alamotti (Edm.). On account of the stormy petrel’s habit of squirting out a yellowish train-oil through the nostrils as a kind of defence the first part - may be derived from an original *aðl- meaning squirting out; belching out (offilth; filthy fluid). For this word-root see further under the bird-name , .  †alan, alen [ālan, ālən, alən], , =, , a species of gull, skua, lestris parasitica, also named [skuti]-. and (partly also ). “scouti-aulin”, to Jam. The bird is said to have its name from the fact that it swoops down on other birds and belches out a stinking fluid upon them for the purpose of depriving them of their food and taking it to its own young ones. is derived from skoot, , to squirt any liquid; to evacuate liquid excrement; and , is an older synonym: ,, urine; cattle-wash; liquid manure,  ale, , ala,, wash (of cattle), adeln, , to sully with mud; fluid sharn, adela, adele, addle. the bird-name , where the first part of the word can be explained in the same way. The name “Allan hawk” is found in certain parts of Scotland and Ireland, partly for “Richardson’s skua” or “skuti-alan”, stercorarius crepidatus (Lat. stercus,, excrement), partly for the red-throated diver and for the great northern diver. with “scouti-aulin” “skout” as a name for Uria Lomvia Pall. — Having regard to the occurrence of the word thus outside of Shetland,, is perhaps not originally a term (  Norn) even though it may be explained as Norse.  ald [āld], intensive in the phrase “ ”, immovable odal-property inherited from fore-fathers, scarcely originates from (and
 * -?  and   ,