skalli
See also: Skalli
Icelandic
Etymology
From the Old Norse skalli (“a bald head”), from or related to Proto-Germanic *skaljō (“shell, husk”).
Cognate with Latin catīnus (“a dish”), Greek κοτύλος (kotúlos, “(frying) pan”), κοτύλη (kotúlē, “cup, beaker”), Sanskrit चत्वाल (catvāla, “hole, cavity”)
Noun
skalli m (genitive singular skalla, nominative plural skallar)
- baldness
- Hann er að fá skalla.
- He's going bald.
- baldhead, baldy
- 2 Kings 2:23-24 (English and Icelandic)
- Þaðan hélt hann til Betel. Og er hann gekk upp veginn, gengu smásveinar út úr borginni, hæddu hann og kölluðu til hans: „Kom hingað, skalli! Kom hingað, skalli!“ Sneri hann sér þá við, og er hann sá þá, formælti hann þeim í nafni Drottins. Þá komu tvær birnur út úr skóginum og rifu í sundur fjörutíu og tvo af drengjunum.
- From there Elisha went up to Bethel. As he was walking along the road, some youths came out of the town and jeered at him. "Go on up, you baldhead!" they said. "Go on up, you baldhead!" He turned around, looked at them and called down a curse on them in the name of the LORD. Then two bears came out of the woods and mauled forty-two of the youths.
- Þaðan hélt hann til Betel. Og er hann gekk upp veginn, gengu smásveinar út úr borginni, hæddu hann og kölluðu til hans: „Kom hingað, skalli! Kom hingað, skalli!“ Sneri hann sér þá við, og er hann sá þá, formælti hann þeim í nafni Drottins. Þá komu tvær birnur út úr skóginum og rifu í sundur fjörutíu og tvo af drengjunum.
- 2 Kings 2:23-24 (English and Icelandic)
- a bald spot
- (soccer) a header, the act of hitting the ball with the head
- a crown, the top of the head
Synonyms
- (baldness): sköllóttur, hárleysi
- (bald spot): skallablettur
- (crown): hvirfill
Derived terms
Derived terms
- á skallanum, vera á skallanum (be blind drunk)
- fá skalla (to go bald)
- hafa skalla (to be bald)
- sitja með sveittan skallann, sitja með sveittan skallann yfir (to sweat over something)
- skalla
- sköllóttur
References
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “skull”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
Anagrams
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