Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the Norn Language in Shetland Part I.pdf/508

382 Norn see Introd. V (also N.Spr. VII), § 38 g. — The word is sometimes used in , in, of small, whitish clouds, dentiform clouds, white “”.

jakkel$2$ [jakəl],, a) a swarm of small creatures, gnats; b) a shoal of small fish; c)  in kind of porbeagle,  ); a lock [‘lot’] o’, -tings; see and , ; in sense c also noted down in — *jakk-. jakka,, to roam, frequentative form of jaga,,  jacken, , to hurry along. For the development of meaning of in, see $w$,
 * very small sharks (small

jakkelbitel [jak··əlbit·əl],, jocularly applied to a molar; also to a large tooth ( a molar). . — The word is a of $s$,, and ,

jakkel-ho [jak··əlhō·],, a young, small (a species of shark). and See  and $2$, (meaning c), as well as the definitions given under these words.

jal [jāl],, to scream, cry, of gulls; “de maw (the gull) is ”: harbinger of wind. jala,, to shout, yell, cry; yaul, yawl, to yell.

jalaklag [jal··aklāg·],, a shouting; noise; to mak’ a j., to make a noise; to cry (or shout). See ,, and ,

jalakrabb,, see ,

jala-crack [jal··akrak·] and jali-crack [jal··ikrak·],, a loud cry; a noisy quarrel; also roar of laughter; — to had (mak’) a j.-c., to make a hubbub by crying (or by laughing noisily), to quarrel noisily, -crack: -crack: , For the first part of the see, The second part is crack,  “ [jādi]-crack, a j.-c. o’ laughter”, reported from , is possibly a corruption of “-crack”.

jalder [jaldər],, 1) babble; noisy talk; a loud quarrel. 2) (continuous) barking, of a hound or sheep-dog, when the quarry is at bay. The word is an old clangour, partly chatter, talk. See the word.
 * jaldr = hjaldr,, partly din,

jalder [jaldər],, 1) to babble; to talk noisily; also to dispute with raised voices. 2) to bark continuously, of a hound or sheep-dog when the quarry is at bay. of an old *jala; jala, , to shout, yell, cry, , , and, from gala. The word is hardly directly derived from hjala,, to chatter, talk, as the original hj usually changes in Norn to sj [ᶊ], but to j in a few instances only (such as in ).
 * jaldra? See,  a

†jalk [ja‘lk],, a) of dogs: to yelp; b) of persons: to babble, to talk noisily. From a “*jala”, like the preceding word? Or only an alteration of yelp? yalp [ja‘lp],, = yelp.

jalpersten, jalpinsten,, see , ,

person of equal age to another, mostly in, , , persons of equal age, in a special sense: twins. The word is now obsolescent in, being replaced by “yeild, yield [jɩld]”, eild (yeild, yield). In the word is still used. — jafnaldri,, and jafnaldra, , of equal age. For the and form  jamaldre, jamaldri = javnaldri,, (person) of equal age.
 * jamald, jammel [jaməl],, a