Ak-taumr

古诺尔斯语词典条目

Ak-taumr

古诺尔斯语词典条目

定义

1 ak-taumr

m. esp. in pl. ar, lines (taumar) to trim (aka) the sail, distinguished from höfuðbendur, the stays of the mast, perhaps the braces of a sail (used by Egilsson to transl. ύπέραι in Od. 5. 260), Þórarinn stýrði ok hafði aktaumana um herðar sér, þvíat þröngt var á skipinu, had the braces round his shoulders, because the boat was blocked up with goods, Ld. 56; the phrase, sitja í aktaumum, to manage the sail; ef ek sigli með landi fram, ok sit ek í aktaumum, þá skal engi snekkja tvítugsessa sigla fyrir mér, eða ek vilja svipta (reef the sail) fyr en þeir, Fms. v. 337; reiði slitnaði, svá at bæði gékk í sundr höfuðbendur ok aktaumar, Fas. iii. 118; reki segl ofan, en a. allir slitni, 204; slitnuðu höfuðbendur ok aktaumar, Bær. 5, Edda (Gl.) That the braces were generally two may be inferred from the words við aktaum hvárntveggja hálf mörk, N. G. L. i. 199.

2 ak-taumr

2. metaph., sitja í aktaumum, to have the whole management of a thing; mun yðr þat eigi greitt ganga ef þér erut einir í aktaumum, if you are alone in the management of it, Ísl. ii. 49; einir um hituna is now used in the same sense. (The Engl. yoke-lines, as aktaumar is sometimes interpreted (as in the Lat. transl. of the Ld.), are now called stjórntaumar. Aktanmr is obsolete. See ‘Stones of Scotland,’ tab. liv. sqq.)

符文铭文

ᛅᚴ-ᛏᛅᚢᛘᚱ

可能的年轻符文铭文

使用的缩写

常用缩写

Engl
English.
Engl.
English.
esp
especially.
esp.
especially.
gl
glossary.
gl.
glossary.
l.
Linnæus.
Lat
Latin.
Lat.
Latin.
lit
literally.
loc
local, locally.
m.
masculine.
metaph.
metaphor, metaphorical.
p.
page.
pl.
plural.
s. v.
sub verbo.
transl
translation, translated.
transl.
translation, translated.
v.
vide, verb.

作品与作者

Bær.
Bærings Saga. (G. II.)
Edda
Edda. (C. I.)
Fas.
Fornaldar Sögur. (C. II.)
Fms.
Fornmanna Sögur. (E. I.)
Ld.
Laxdæla Saga. (D. II.)
N. G. L.
Norges Gamle Love. (B. II.)
Od.
Odysseifs-kvæði, prose, 1829.

关于

古诺尔斯语词典项目旨在提供基于传奇的克利阿斯比-维格富松著作的综合可搜索词典。

它包括缩写、作品与作者,以及真实的符文铭文。

支持

快速链接

版权 © 2025 古诺尔斯语词典
"Fornjóts synir eru á landi komnir"