Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/167

Rh part of the is  =  skaute or skøyt, , sköt,, skeyti, , skoyti,, = added stay (wooden stay, ), enlargement, filling up. The first part is more uncertain, perhaps “bilge”; “de bilge o’ de boat” = the lower, bilgy part of a boat.

bind [bınd],   [band], [bond]), to bind, binda; corresponding both to “to bind” and “to tie”; — to b. de coo, to tether the cow in the home-field ( is here in contrast to, to k. de coo, to tie the cow in the byre); sometimes, however, also “to b.”, used of tying up the cow in the byre ( in ). — de eart’ is op, the earth has become quite hard owing to continuous wind; see  and ,

binder [bındər],, cold, dry north-east wind which makes the earth dry and hard or “binds” it (see, ). The word, which is found in the above-mentioned form in Maywick, ,, is common in other forms in (with hardening of d to t), :  [bı‘ntər] ,, [bjı‘ntər, bje‘ntər (bjɛ‘ntər), bje‘ᶇtər, bjæ‘ntər, bjæ‘ᶇtər (bjä‘ᶇtər)] ( and ; the form “bje‘ᶇtər” is peculiar to, bjæ‘ntər, bjæ‘ᶇtər and bjä‘ᶇtər: in various places in ; unknown in ), [bjın·târ·] , [bæ‘ᶇtər] and [bä‘ᶇtər] ; a dry b.; a cauld [‘cold’] b.; a b. sky: overcast sky with north-east wind, = a sky. Sometimes of cold, dry wind from another quarter than north-east, but in that case, indicating the direction of wind, sooth-east de day [‘to-day’]” , a b. o’ frost, black-frost, frost which merely “binds” the surface of the soil (: bæ‘ᶇtər). — *bindari, , “binder”, one who binds. — a [bæ‘nt] sky = a sky. See ,
 * “he’s been a b. fae [‘from’] de

binder-op [bın··dərɔp·], in the the final cast of the fishing-line before finishing the fishing and winding up the line about the rod; b) de b.-o. bait, the bait put on the hook at the last cast of the fishing-line. : “bind her up”? “her”, in this case, most to be explained as the fishing-rod; : binda tráðuna upp (tráða, , fishing-rod). The word for fishing-rod in Shetland is generally, a word of the  gender ( vǫndr, ), but in the south of “shø” [‘she’] is often used of things originally masculine.
 * a) de b.-o. kast, when angling:

bing$m$ [bıŋ],, a lump; ball, de b. o’ de foot, the ball of the foot, the part behind the big toe; de b. o’ de hand, the ball of the hand, the muscle behind the thumb. , a bump; bunga,, swelling. .
 * bing- or *byng-. bung and byng,

†bing$h$ [bıŋ],, a pile; heap, a b. o’ hay, o’ corn, o’ taaties [‘potatoes’]; “to lie in a soor [‘sour’] b.”, said of a damp, somewhat stinking heap. : “a lazy b.”, a lazy fellow . bingr, binge,, (and ) bing, , pile; heap. and  “bing”, on the other hand, denotes compartment; box ( bingr, ).

bingel [bıŋgəl],, a bad piece of peat mixed with clay which does not burn to ashes, but remains solid, a aessy [‘ashy’] b. *byngill or *byngla, of *bungr ( bung,, a bump; lump); byngla,, = byngja, a big or corpulent figure. See ,

binjek [bıᶇək, beᶇək, bəᶇək], , a round or lumpy stone easy to