Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/318

192 the,   fummis- in fummisligur, , precipitant; imprudent; headlong. See ,

fommis [fȯmɩᶊ],, to make one confused or bewildered; to put one out of countenance; to cause one to tremble; he me; I was , I was quite confused, by a sudden, disagreeable surprise. For the of the word, see under ,

fona [fȯna],, fire, tabu-name, used by fishermen at sea. More in the forms: , [fəna, fəᶇa, fɩᶇa] and , [fəni]. [in all the forms given]. [fəni]. funi,, a flame; in poetry, of fire (Eg.). — For other tabu-names for fire in see, , , *, $1$ and *.

fonder,, see ,

Hildina-ballad. fang,, a grip; embrace.
 * fong, *fung,, embrace; lap.

fonglin [fåŋglɩn],, a thing lost and found again; I’m [‘I have found’] a f. de day [‘to-day’]. From an old *. of, For the fangla (faangla),, to embrace, also the uncertain fongul, , (catch? fishing-tackle? poetic word. F.A. II).

, (old-fashioned) violin. The first part is doubtless fang, , a grip (see under, ). The second part,, may be with * [snarwa, snar··əwa·] (also noted down in ) in sense of a violin, which may be associated with and  snarva,, to growl; snarfla,, to rattle in the throat ( snore, ), and snara, , string. — “fongsnoro” and “snarwa” probably denoted the same kind of violin as *, *, *, a two-stringed violin, reported from the string of a violin; a f. till a (violin). : *fang-strengr, from fang,, a grip, and strengr, , a string.
 * fongsnoro [fåŋ·snō··ro, -snō··rə],
 * fongstrong [fåŋstråŋ],, the first

fonk,, see ,

for$wg$ [fōr],, a find (something found) of great value; he tought [‘thought’] he was [‘had’] a f., he thought he had found something by which he could become rich. May be associated with forda, , a burden; load (to be carried), and forði,, livelihood; support; store.

for$1$ [fȯr],, 1) a furrow in a field; . 2) a ditch, ridge or narrow strip of grass, forming a boundary between two cultivated patches (corn-rigs), de f. o’ de “rig”; 3) a piece of ground dug by spade across a cultivated patch, =, 5, and ; . — for, , a furrow; drain; ditch, a ploughed furrow in a field ( forarlengd,, and forskot, , a cultivated patch, strip offield). fori,, the lower end of a sloping field.

for [fȯr],, to make a furrow in a field, “to f. for taatis [‘potatoes’]”, when planting potatoes: to make a furrow (with the foot) across a cultivated patch where the potatoes are to be planted.. fora,, to make a furrow in the ground. See $2$,

for [får],, for, in the : “hwat (kwat) for”, like kvat for (fyre), hvad for, hvilken, hvad slags, what, which, what kind of; hwat for a man is he? what kind of man is he?

ford$2$ [fōrd],, a fishing-ground of a certain extent.  the same word as $1$,, however, the ,

ford$1$ [fōrd, fō$2$rd],, a poor result of an errand or of something