Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/452

326 now doubtless used only as a place-name, mostly with a short o-sound [hog··aland·]. *hagaland or -lendi. haglendi,, pasture-land, hageland, hag(e)lende,, , hagalendi [hǣ··alæn·di],, a piece of hill-pasture (for grazing).

hogalif [hō··galɩf·, -lif·, hog··a-, hɔg··a-] and hogaliv, -leave [hō··galɩv·, -li̇̄v (hog··a-, hɔg··a-)], 1) leave, permission for a man, for a fixed payment, to cut peats and have liberty of grazing for cattle in the out-field, belonging to another,  also to cut (coarse grass and heather for thatching or litter). 2) payment for the permission mentioned under 1; to pay h. Sometimes with dropped final consonant: [(hō··gali·), hog··ali·, hɔg··ali·]. — *haga-løyfi. The first part of the is , , pasture, out-field; the second part  is a mingling of forms of løyfi (leyfi),, (leave, permission), and leave.

hogelsku, hogelskju [hȯg··əlsᶄū·, -sᶄu·, (-skjū·, -skju·), hog··əlsᶄū·, -sᶄu·, (-skjū·, -skju·)],, and shoes, down at the heels, reported in the “to geng [‘go’] in h.”; 2) worn-out condition, to shoes; to geng de shune [‘shoes’] in h., to wear one’s shoes so long that they become out of shape. II) : h. shune, worn-out shoes, down at the heels; to geng de shune h. = to geng de shune h. (see ); de shune (or boots) is gane [‘are gone’] h., the shoes (boots) have lost their shape. III) : to geng h. (wi’ de shune or boots), to wear shoes (boots) that are worn-out and down at the heels. — The pronunciation with (close) o-sound “hogəl-” is reported from (  and ) as used alternately with “hȯgəl-”; elsewhere more : hȯgəl-. —  From  is given a parallel form, - [hȯg··lasᶄɔu·, hɔg··lasᶄɔu·] or  [hɔg··ləsᶄɔu·], in the : “to geng de shune in h.” , “to geng de shune h.” . — As a substantive the word is doubtless an old shoes. “in  ” an  and  , , may partly be a)  hǫkulskúaðr, supposedly = ǫkulskúaðr,, wearing shoes, reaching (or above) the ankles, partly b) appear as a shortening of the “in ”. to geng in h.: ganga í hǫkulskóm; “to geng h.” most  “ganga hǫkulskúaðr”. —  ,
 * I), 1) worn-out
 * hǫkulskór = *ǫkulskór,, low
 * *í hǫkulskóm . As

hoger [hōgər],, 1) (bad) state or condition; shø made a puir h. o’ him, she did not look well after him . 2) profit; result, poor profit; unsuccessful result of something; hit cam’ till a puir h., it (the undertaking, errand, work) had a poor result (fairly ); he made a puir h. o’ it, he made a muddle of it. — hagr, , condition; advantage, - in is doubtless the old sign in the gender which is grafted into the word. See $2$, , which is the same word, and to which assimilates in a few phrases (he made a puir o’ it = he made a puir o’ it).

hogg$1$, hugg [(hɔg) hog] and hoggi, huggi [hɔgi, hogi],, a blow, push, only noted down in meanings and collocations: a) a drubbing; chastisement; to get, b) in the “to play h.”, to play “tig”, a boy’s game: A gives B a blow or tap, after which B tries to catch A.; : , and,. In
 * [: hɔgi; : hogi].