Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/240

114 (now rare); kwar’r  gaun? where are you going? tygur, dykker, dokker, daar ( ykkr, and ). — From is reported an  form  [dō··rā·] with last vowel lengthened, in the phrase:, to you (thee), in the return greeting: d.! good day to you! as reply to a ! dor (you) and dora (your) in the Foula-ballad. Similar forms are found in : tygara (in addressing a single person), in : dykkar, dokkor, , in East Norway “daar, door” (see “de”,  in Aa., R.).

dor [dōr],, 1) to deprive one of one’s senses ( the hearing), to paralyse; make deaf, a) in expletive such as: De’il [‘devil’] d. dee! b) to bewilderbewilder [sic] a person by noise and shouting; de bairn me, me doon; in same sense dore,  (Jam.). 2) to shout something into one’s ear in order to get the person in question to remember it; to repeat something (an instruction) several times in a loud, emphatic manner ; he it intill [‘into’] him. — *dára, of the root “dá-”, denoting deadening of the senses; dá, , catalepsy ( daae,, senseless state of mind; lethargy); dár, , that makes an overwhelming impression on a person. dára, , is handed down in the sense of: to mock, to make a fool of one (dári). the rare dorr (dor), , a) to make a fool of one; b) to deafen with noise.


 * dora,, see under ,

dorabrod,dorabrod, [sic], see ,

dorafel [dor··afel·, dɔr··a-] and dorifel [dor··ifel·, -fəl·, dɔr··i-],, really board of a door, but now only used , a) in the phrase: gane i’, , broken into pieces, loosened, of something con - sisting of boards joined together; b) of an object, old; fragile, on the point of falling to pieces, a auld [‘old’] d. o’ a kist, an old, extremely fragile chest, a auld d. o’ a bed, an old, rickety and poor bed. Besides ,, are also found forms such as [dɔr··abrɔd·] and the more [dɔl··abrɔd·, dɔ̇l··a-] ; [dol··i-, dɔl··ibrɔd·, -bråd·] is found in the phrase: gane i’,. and [dal··ibråd·]: In is found also in the sense of a piece of broken timber. — , is an old *dura-fjǫl, , board of a door; , in -, -,, is rather brod,, a board, than brot,, a fragment; the phrase: gane i’ (really side-boards of a pack-saddle, ) = gane i’, , from brot, is found, in.

dorasuk, dorosuk,, see.

dord [dȯrd],, lump; a big, corpulent person, a d. o’ a chield. the same word as , , and, ;

dordek [dȯrdək],, a portion of something; ironically: yon [‘that’] is a d.; not  a form of, , enlarged by the suffix -ack, -ock; see In the sense of a portion of food, the word might, however, originate from dagverðr, dǫgurðr,, early dinner, corresponding as to time to  breakfast; with this,  “-meat”, , a piece of bread, bannock, given between dinner and supper, from *dǫgurðarmatr.

doren [dōrən] and dorin [dōrin], and, as in: Ill d.! a) expressing impatience, anger, or thirst