- sæ·sjúkr
- adj.страдающий морской болезнью
Old Norse-ensk orðabók. 2013.
Old Norse-ensk orðabók. 2013.
Differences between Norwegian Bokmål and Standard Danish — Danish and Norwegian Bokmål (the most common standard form of written Norwegian) are very similar languages, but differences between them do exist. The languages are mutually intelligible, with the primary differences being in pronunciation and… … Wikipedia
Níð — (Old Norse) (Anglo Saxon nith , Old High German (OHG) nid(d) , modern German form Neid , modern Low Saxon nied ) in ancient Germanic mythology was the constituting and qualifying attribute for people suspected of being a malicious mythological… … Wikipedia
sick — sick1 /sik/, adj., sicker, sickest, n. adj. 1. afflicted with ill health or disease; ailing. 2. affected with nausea; inclined to vomit. 3. deeply affected with some unpleasant feeling, as of sorrow, disgust, or boredom: sick at heart; to be sick … Universalium
siech — Adj erw. obs. (8. Jh.), mhd. siech, ahd. sioh, as. siok Stammwort. Aus g. * seuka Adj. krank , auch in gt. siuks, anord. sjúkr, ae. sēoc, afr. siāk. Das Verbum siechen zeigt im Gotischen starke Präsensformen (siukan), allerdings ein umschriebenes … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
sick — {{11}}sick (adj.) unwell, O.E. seoc, from P.Gmc. *seukaz, of uncertain origin. The general Germanic word (Cf. O.N. sjukr, Dan. syg, O.S. siok, O.Fris. siak, M.Du. siec, O.H.G. sioh, Goth. siuks sick, ill ), but in German and Dutch displaced by… … Etymology dictionary
sick — [[t]sɪk[/t]] adj. er, est 1) pat afflicted with ill health or disease; ailing 2) pat affected with nausea; inclined to vomit 3) deeply affected with some distressing feeling: sick at heart[/ex] 4) psi mentally, morally, or emotionally deranged,… … From formal English to slang
seug- — seug English meaning: sad, grievous; ill Deutsche Übersetzung: “bekũmmert, traurig, gekränkt, krank” Material: Arm. hiucanim ‘sieche hin”; M.Ir. socht m. (*sug to ) ‘schweigen, Depression”; Goth. siuks “ sick “, O.Ice. sjūkr “… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
bradsot — ˈbradsət noun ( s) Etymology: probably from Icelandic brāthasōt, from Old Norse, plague, murrain, from brāthr sudden, hasty, heated + sōtt sickness, disease; akin to Old Norse brāth tar and to Old Norse sjūkr sick more at breath, sick : braxy 1 * … Useful english dictionary
syssel — ˈsisəl noun ( s) Etymology: Danish, from Icelandic sȳsla business, work, activity, syssel, from Old Norse; akin to Old English sūsl misery, torment, torture, sēoslig afflicted, Old Norse sȳsl eager, painstaking, sjūkr sick more at sick : an… … Useful english dictionary