Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/184

58 bog$2$ [bɔg],, cross-sea; rough sea with short, choppy waves breaking against each other, really “rooting up”; der’r a b. i’ de sea. Sometimes in place-names, as: [sta‘kabɔg], difficult, agitated seas near “de ” (some skerries to the north of Fedeland, ). bauk (bok),, and bauka (boka),, digging; rooting up; heavy sea; bauka,, to root; dig; in of breakers: to gurgle noisily. ,

bog [bȯg],, of liquid: to spout out of a narrow opening, to jet, spurt, to b. ut; de water, matter or blood (stood ) ut. Also  of very wet feet, of water oozing from the shoes, in walking: de feet is [‘are’] , weet [‘wet’], the feet are soaking wet. : *boga. boga,, to form a curve; bend; blóðbogi,, a jet of blood (in the form of an arch); bogi, , (curve) “the direction taken by a liquid when it rushes with force out of a narrow opening” (B.H.). ,

boga [boga],, in the : “in b.”, crumbling; crushed, to be or lie in b.; to lay in b., to crumble; crush; destroy completely. Also [voga, vɔga]. ? The word is used of grass and corn trampled down, or laid by the wind. from *bok- and corresponding to and  boka, boge, buka,, to press; beat; beat until pliable., , and also and ,

only preserved in the so-called “ern’s søng” or eagle’s song from Foula. Same word as pøk,  påk and pog (boy)? b is often used for p, when initial, in Norn. bogdalin, bogdelin, bogdel, , see.
 * boga [boga], *bogra [(bogra) bōgra],
 * bokra [bokra],, a little boy;

bogel [bogəl],, a large cake (of oat- or barley-meal), often with notched edges. These cakes were formerly baked and eaten on a kind of holiday, the so-called “-day” (- or -day [bogla-]: ), March 29th, the day on which the field-work (de ) began. The word can be connected either a) with bøkul, bøkil,, lump, lumpy piece ( of peat: torvbøkil), also mass of cloud, or b) with bugla, bygla, (bygel, ), a bend; curve — most , however, with the former word, as “” in denotes a lumpy piece,  a big, lumpy piece of peat (the first peat cut off or the edge-peat;  ), exactly corresponding to bøkul, bøkil.

Bogelri [bogəl-ri̇̄],, storm; rough weather setting in about “-day”. See and ,

†bogerplett [bɔg··ərplæt·], , in the, bogerpletts: 1*) pock-marks, scars from small-pox. 2) small wrinkles and folds in something unevenly sewn. More : [bagər]- or [bägər]-pletts. In sense 1 for *pogerblett (see, ), from *pok-arblettr ( pokeær, smaapokeær, pock-arrs, pock-marks); in sense 2 quite another word: pucker, ? and plait, ?

†bogerpletted [bɔg··ərplæt·əd], , 1*) pock-marked; 2) wrinkled, contracted, of something unevenly sewn. More : [bagər]-, [bägər]-. See ,

bogi$n$ [bogi],, small bay or round cove; creek. Outside the word is found in place-names, names of small bays, in the forms [bɔg, bōγ ], [boga] and (more rarely). bogi,, curve; bend; “bugr” also in the same sense as.