Source: http://lexicon.ff.cuni.cz/html/oi_cleasbyvigfusson/b0034.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 11:08:00+00:00

Document:
AUKA, jók, jóku (mod. juku), aukit [Lat. augere; Gr. GREEK Ulf.
Ld. 54; þá eykst enn ellefu nóttum við, eleven nights are still added, Rb.
Vm. 7: auka synd (dat.) á synd (acc.) ofan, to heap sin upon sin, Stj.
pat er aukat, O. H. L. 1. c.; orðum aukið, exaggerated, Thom. 73.
aukan, f. increase, K. Á. 20.
aukana.) 2. metaph. seed, germs, thou hast given me no seed, Stj.
of the earth, Barl. 193, 200. γ interest of capital, N. G. L. ii.
380; vide áauki, sársauki, sakauki, i. 187. COMPDS: auka-dagr, m.
Rb. 116. auka-verk, n. by-work, Bs. i. 326. auka-vika, u, f.
'eke-week,' intercalary week, v. hlaupár.
auk-nefna, d, to nickname, Landn. 243.
it seemed a nickname was given him when he was called 'Brighting,' Fms.
for he was a handsome man and well-haired, white of hair, Fbr.
of the Saga period in Icel. down to the 14th century.
aukning, f., Old Engl. 'eeking,' increase, Stj. 100, 176, Sks. 137.
and sometimes with a double k, ökkvisi, Bs. i. 497 vellum MS. A. M.
499; auðkvisi, Ld. 236 C and the vellum MS. A. M. 122 A to Sturl. ii.
Haukdæla ætt er svá hafa heitið hér til, Sturl. ii. 8, at the birth of earl Gizur.
mentioned above, and the altered form er-.] The MSS. of the Nj. I. c.
aum-hjartaðr, adj. tender-hearted, charitable, Stj. 547, Hom. 109.
aumindi, n. painful feeling from a wound or the like, Fél. ix. 192.
655 xxxii. 15, Bs. i. 74, Hom. 87.
now freq. used in reflex., aumkast yfir e-t, to pity.
aumkan, f. lamentation, wailing. El. 10.
feeling of a wound or the like, v. aumr.
aumligr, adj. and -liga, adv. [A. S. earmlic] , poorly, wretched, Grett.
161, Fms. i. 138, v. 218, Sturl. ii. 13, Bær. 4, Magn. 432, H. E. iii. 366.
and so is the skin round the finger-nail, id.
sense, in Dan. and Swed. only = sore, and metaph. tender. 2. metaph.
man, Orkn. 153, Hom. 15, 16, Th. 6, 16: in a bad sense = armr, Fms.
aum-staddr, adj. part, in a poor, wretched state, Stj. 475.
AUNGR, adj. pron., Lat. nullus, none, v. engi, enginn.
AUNGR, adj. narrow, Lat. angustus, v. ongr.
aung-vit, n., medic, lipothymia, a fainting-fit, Fél. ix. 193.
AURAR, m. pl. money, aura- in compds, v. eyrir.
an arrow, Fb. iii. 406.
muddy, Vsp. 31, Ls. 48; cp. úrigr, madidus.
the Alvismál one of the names of the earth is aurr (kalla aur uppregin).

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