Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/453

Rh : hɔgi. , — hǫgg,, a blow; stroke.

hogg$2$ [hɔg] and hoggin [hɔgin, hɔgɩn],, a piece of false keel, piece of rounded keel in the stem or stern of a boat, in the “keel-h.” Reported from and — Doubtless a hewn piece, and in that case, originally the same word as, or a of, $1$,

hoggistaf, huggistaf, -staff [hɔg··istaf·, hog··istaf·],, a gaff by which a large fish is hooked, in order to haul it above the surface of the water. “hɔg··istaf·”:  and — *hǫgg-(stafr). hǫgg, , a blow,, ; see $1$, The second part of the  may be either  stafr, , or staff,
 * elsewhere more : hog··istaf·.

hogj [hōdᶎ],, to bend down, crouch, in the “to h. anesell [‘oneself’]”, to stoop; crouch down, over the fire; he is [hōdᶎɩn] him [‘himself’] ower de fire; dee [‘yourself’] in till de fire! — høykja (heykja), , to crouch on one’s haunches, reflexively: høykjask (heykjask), to crouch down; hoykja seg, , to sit down for a while; hykja, , to bend down, hykja seg, to crouch down. — The development kj > gj [dᶎ] is rather rare initially and finally in Norn words. The development kj > k or g, when final or initial with dropped j, is more common. gi > gji > dᶎɩ, in ,

hogla [hōgla],, hill-pasture; awaa to de h.! go (trudge) along to the pasture! a shout to a cow. Is the same word as (haaglet),, [*hag(a)-leiti];

hogri, hogeri,, see $2$, ,, and ,

hogsted [hɔg··stɛd·],, applied to cattle, sheep: frequenting a certain place in the hill-pasture; h. sheep. *hag-stœðr. hagfastr,, of sheep, is found in the same sense as. See *,

hogsten [hɔg··sten·],, a boundary-stone ( corner-stone), dividing pastures in the out-field. *hag(a)steinn. See *$1$, and ,

†hoid [hɔid, håid], †hoit [(hɔi‘t) håi‘t, hȯi‘t], †hoitt [hȯi‘tt, hȯƫ], , a hut, : a) sea-term, tabu-name in fishermen’s for booth, fishermen’s hut, one of the collection of huts from which fishing is (was) carried on in common, during the summer, away from home; in this sense  in the form . b) a mean house; also ( in ) a smoky, dirty house. In sense b in the form ; a h. o’ a hole, a mean hut (: hȯi‘t and  hȯi‘tt); in  pronounced “håi‘t”. — In is found a form or [hot(t)i] = (sense a). — The different forms indicate that the word has not recently found its way into from (hut). It might be a loan-word from  or from ; and hütte,  hut, hotte. For the final d in  hydda,, a hut.

hoidin$1$ [(hɔidɩn) håidɩn],, the ridge of a height, top or uppermost part of a high hill or bank, in : ; de o’ de hill; we ’re gotten to de , we have climbed up near the top. As a place-name, in names of heights, the word is found in different forms; thus: de or [hɔdəns, hɔ̇dəns] o’ de (*), o’ de Ness , heights, elevated pastures: *hals-hæðirnar (hœðirnar), *nes-hæðirnar (hœðirnar); de $h$ [håidɩns]