Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/457

Rh inside of the turnip.. hollow sea, and high, crested waves, to be agitated, to h. ; de sea is . In sense 2 a) *holka (or *holga), to hollow out, b) *hulka, to stump; make uneven. See $n$,, and ,, as well as the $1$,
 * holka. 2) of the sea: to cause

holk$2$ [hȯ‘ᶅk],, 1) to walk bent with rounded shoulders, to geng [‘go’] . 2) to stump, to walk unsteadily and jerkily, to geng. In sense 1 the word is directly to be classed with $2$, 1; in sense 2 it partly assimilates to hölka,, to be clumsy on one’s feet. The word can hardly be directly associated with hykla and høkla,, to walk bent and unsteadily; “høkla” is found in  in the form $3$, ; . A form [hu‘lk] is found in in the same sense as, to geng , originating from a *hulka,
 * see $1$,, from *hulk.

holket$3$ [hȯ‘ᶅkət],, deep; roomy; round-bottomed, of a boat or pot; a h. boat ; a h. kettle . Properly, hollowed out. holka,, a depression, and see $1$, and
 * holkóttr or *holkaðr.

holket$n$ [hȯ‘ᶅkət],, humped; round-shouldered; also in a wider sense: mis-shapen; a h. craeter’ [‘creature’] or ting; h. shooders, round shoulders. Also [hȯ‘ᶅki]; a h. body [‘person’]. —, a knot; hunch.
 * hulkóttr? To be classed with $1$,

holki [hȯ‘ᶅki],, peevish; surly; a h. body. ulken, , surly; cross. See ,

holkin [hȯ‘ᶅkin (hɔ̇ᶅ‘kin)], , heavy swell (hollow sea, crested waves), a h. i’ de sea = a i’  de sea. . *holkan (holgan)? See $2$, and

holks [hȯ‘ᶅks],, bad temper; peevishness; sulks, in the “to be or sit i’ de h.”, to be peevish; to sulk.  for * from *;  ulka,, inter alia to be sulky, just ready to grumble (R.).

holl [hȯᶅ],, in the “h. and [hȯᶅ·bānd·, -band· (-ban·)]”, bag and baggage; he (dey) guid h. and h.-, he (they) went and took everything with him (them). from hǫgld,, a strap, fastened to the end of a rope, hogold (hȯlda, hȯll). then denotes the rope to which the strap is fastened.

hollball [hȯᶅbaᶅ·, -bäᶅ·],, rolling over head foremost, head over heels; dey guid [‘went’] h. For
 * or ? See ,

hollband [hȯᶅ·bānd·, -band· (-ban·)], , see under ,

holli [håᶅɩ (hɔᶅɩ), hȯᶅɩ],, 1) capacious, capable of holding much; a h. boat; a h. (, fish-creel).  $3$,  2) slow to finish; de grund is h., longer in getting through than expected, in delving a piece of ground. (: hȯᶅɩ). — holleg, hollig, , solid; copious; substantial; holligur,, roomy.

sea-term, tabu-name in fishermen’s for deep-sea fishing-grounds; de h. Also, [håil(l)·åst·]. an original *álvǫst. áll,, a gutter; a furrow; deep depression, in poetry also ocean ( the course of a stream, current), álur,, the narrow course of a stream. In “de ” [*álarnir],, is found as a name for a fishing-ground; see
 * hollost [(hå$1$l·råst·) hɔᶅ·åst·], ,