Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/413

Rh place by a long stay in it.” of land laid out for pasture, and stœðr, stød,, stationary. A form  [hɔgstɛd] is noted down in in the original sense;
 * haga-stœðr. hagi,, a piece

hagerd, hagert [hāgərd, -ərt], , badly and clumsily made, having a bad deportment; a puir [‘poor’] h.-like body (person). . Doubtless for the more common might be the same word as $2$ [ hagr] with preserved ending -r; the form from hagr.
 * see further under that

hagi [hagi],, an old, worn-out spade, reported in the “a auld [‘old’] h. o’ a spade”. haki,, a spade; a sward-cutter, a hook, crook. — Besides , a form [hagɩs] is reported, “a auld h. o’ a spade”, arisen by the merging of “haki” and “haks-”;  haks,, a large block (wooden block), and haksa,, to cut carelessly.

hagl, hagel$1$ [hagəl],, (subordinate) boundary-mark between parts of the hill-pasture; a stone set up as a boundary-mark. The word appears to be a of [hagla hwi̇̄da], also called “de [hagəl]”, as a place-name, name for a stone of white quartz, indicating the boundary-mark between Northdale and Burrafirth,, in which connection the word most may be derived from hégeitill,, white quartz, stone of quartz, “hégeitill” otherwise appears in in the forms, , and ,.
 * ,, hill-pasture. Note, however,

hagl, hagel$2$,, thin, poor corn, see, $2$,

hag-less,, see ,

$$haglet [hāglet, -lət?],, a place in the hill-pasture where an animal is or has been in the habit of grazing; “hit [‘it’] is come back till its auld [‘old’] h.”, said of a straying animal returning to its former pasture. Edm.: haaglet. *hag(a)leiti. hagi,, a piece of land laid out for pasture. For the second part of the    leite, , in sense of a place where cattle collect for milking (leite 3 in Aa.). hag-let,, pasture for cattle near the farm. See ,

hagli [hāgli] and hagali [hā··gali·], , careful; convenient; proper; fine.  hagligr,, convenient; handy; proper, The compounded, negative , is more common than .

hagli [hāgli] and hagali [hā··gali·], , carefully; conveniently; properly; finely; du ’s come h. on dis time, (partly ironically) you have done it finely this time. hagliga,, conveniently.

haglos, hag-less [hāgləs], , 1) wanting in economy, in management or housekeeping; immoderate; wasteful; a h. body. 2) boundless; excessive; illimitable; de h.-l. ocean. — *hag-lauss,, wanting in hagr (order; state; moderation; limit). See $n$,

hagmark [hag··ma‘rk·],, boundary-mark, a corner-stone dividing pastures in the hill. *hag(a)mark; hagamark,, boundary-mark in the hill. See the following word.

hagmet [hag·mɛt·],, a cornerstone dividing pastures in the hill. the is *,, hill-pasture. For the second part see further $2$,, a mark, boundary-mark. ,
 * hag-met or -mat. The first part of

hagri$1$ [hagri, hag··əri·],, a