Contionary:màel: Difference between revisions
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#*''Rímbegla'': (Scots Norse translation)</br>{{ux|snon|arr tfèrr '''màlarr''' at misar, o thrìrr mànadharr at '''màel'''|in a half-year there are two '''seasons''', in a '''season''' there are three months</br>(lit. "there are two seasons a half-year, and three months a season")}} | #*''Rímbegla'': (Scots Norse translation)</br>{{ux|snon|arr tfèrr '''màlarr''' at misar, o thrìrr mànadharr at '''màel'''|in a half-year there are two '''seasons''', in a '''season''' there are three months</br>(lit. "there are two seasons a half-year, and three months a season")}} | ||
# time | # time | ||
#:{{uxi|snon| | #:{{uxi|snon|vèrann ètann u màel|it is time to eat (lit. "it is eating's time")}} | ||
# meal, mealtime | # meal, mealtime | ||
Revision as of 00:28, 23 April 2026
Scots Norse
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Old Norse mál, from Proto-Germanic *maþlą
Noun
màel m (triggers lenition, plural màlarr)
Etymology 2
From Old Norse mál, from Proto-Germanic *mēlą
Noun
màel m (triggers lenition, plural màlarr)
- measurement, size
- season; a quarter of a year
- Rímbegla: (Scots Norse translation)arr tfèrr màlarr at misar, o thrìrr mànadharr at màel
- in a half-year there are two seasons, in a season there are three months
(lit. "there are two seasons a half-year, and three months a season")
- in a half-year there are two seasons, in a season there are three months
- Rímbegla: (Scots Norse translation)
- time
- vèrann ètann u màel ― it is time to eat (lit. "it is eating's time")
- meal, mealtime
Etymology 3
From Middle Irish mál(form unsure).
Noun
màel m (triggers lenition, plural màlarr)
Mutation
| radical | lenition | eclipsis |
|---|---|---|
| màel | mhàel | not applicable |
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Scots Norse.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
Categories:
- Scots Norse terms inherited from Old Norse
- Scots Norse terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Scots Norse lemmas
- Scots Norse nouns
- Scots Norse masculine nouns
- Snon:Poetry
- Snon:Law
- Scots Norse terms with usage examples
- Scots Norse terms borrowed from Middle Irish
- Scots Norse poetic terms
- Scots Norse terms with rare senses