Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/505

Rh unsubstantial, by being dried up (R.).

iset [isət, i̇̄sət],, applied to colour in animals: bluish-grey, with spots of darker shade; iron-grey; dark-coloured with many light hairs in between, giving the dark colour a light tinge, of colour that looks bluish in the distance; greyish and mottled in different shades, more definitely denoted by a prefixed adjective: blue-i., black-i., partly also “red-i.”; — having a reddish or bluish tinge ; — with small spots. a i. coo [‘cow’], horse or sheep. Beside is found a form  [iskət, ɩskət], reported from, , and black and white, grey (or bluish) and dirty-red. : “iskət”, dirty-white with a yellowish or greyish-brown tinge. and : “iskət” = iset. — to be referred to hysjutt (hyskjutt), , mottled in different shades of the same colour, faded in patches (R.), hyskjutt (huskutt),, to hair: greyish, grizzled (Aa.), “hyskji”, hyskjutt, hiskjug, hyssjog, yssjug, “ysugar, öisugar” , , grizzled, shaded in two colours (Ri.). , ,
 * “ɩskət”, closely mottled,

Isi [isi (i̇̄si)],, a cow of the colour described under ; see the preceding word. Older: *.
 * Hysja?

isk [isk],, applied to sleet: to fall; to rain (in cold air), or to snow slightly, to begin to rain or snow; to and rain; he is [iskɩn, iskən] ut o’ him; he is de rain or snaw [‘snow’] ; he is  de snaw (ut) o’ him. of, , A form [ist] is reported doubtfully from and

iska [iska],, in the “i.-rain”,  “i.- rain”, fine, cold rain. From and is reported  [iskɩns], , = . See and ,

isket [iskət, ɩskət],, to animals: having different shades of colour, mottled, see further under ,

iskins [iskɩns],, see ,

?ist [ist],, see ,

istek [i̇̄stək, istək], and , 1), to weather: cold, rainy, i. wadder [‘weather’]; may in this instance also be regarded as a substantive and written with a hyphen: i.-wadder; in Unst  of cold, variable, showery weather; “der’r a i. track upon him”, the weather looks as if it would be cold and changeable with sleety showers . a i. sky, a sleety atmosphere full of heavy, dark clouds(thunder-clouds), in winter ; i. cloods [‘clouds’], i. , heavy, dark, snow-laden clouds ; see ,  II) as a : 1) small, soft, cold rain; he is cornin’ ut i. . 2) usually in, : a) sleety clouds; b) sleety showers. — : i̇̄stək and istək. : i̇̄stək. — Doubtless an adjective: *ísóttr. “ wadder” for “* wadder” from original *ísótt veðr. The common suffix - was added to * when the latter was changed to a substantive, and the weak-stressed e in * was consequently dropped ( from *: *i̇̄··sətək·). issje,, applied to weather: slightly cold, issje väder; “dä ä issje ute”, it is chilly outside (Ri.).

this, that, only preserved in a fragment of conversation in Norn from or that? Also: e [ə] [jada, jāda]? — a)  hetta,
 * itta [ita],  in ,
 * ?, what is this