hákarl

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Etymology === From Icelandic hákarl (“shark”). === Noun === hákarl (uncountable) An Icelandic food, cured fermented shark with a strong ammonia smell. == Icelandic == === Etymology === From Old Norse hákarl (“a shark”), hár (“shark/dogfish”) +‎ karl (“a man”). Related to háfur (“a dogfish”) and hár (“dogfish”). Compare the Faroese hákallur and Russian аку́ла (akúla). === Pronunciation === (archaic) IPA(key): /haːkar(t)l/ (modern) IPA(key): /hauː.kartl/ === Noun === hákarl m (genitive singular hákarls, nominative plural hákarlar) a Greenland shark, Somniosus microcephalus any shark (scaleless cartilaginous fish) ==== Usage notes ==== The dated term hákerling (see kerling (“woman”)) was once used to refer to sharks as well. ==== Declension ==== ==== Derived terms ==== ==== Related terms ==== háskerðingur ==== See also ==== hapanhai === References === == Old Norse == === Etymology === From hár (“shark”) +‎ karl (“a man”). === Pronunciation === (12th Century Icelandic) IPA(key): /hɑ̃ːˌkarl/ === Noun === hákarl m (genitive hákarls, plural hákarlar) a shark ==== Declension ==== ==== Descendants ==== Icelandic: hákarl m (“Greenland shark”) Faroese: hákallur m (“basking shark”) Norn: håkilling m (“large shark”) Norwegian Nynorsk: håkall m (“Greenland shark”), ⇒ håkjerring (< hákerling) → Northern Sami: áhkạlakkis → Kildin Sami: а̄һклэӈӈк (āhkleŋŋk), а̄һклиӈӈк (āhkliŋŋk) → Skolt Sami: akkli → Middle Russian: Russian: аку́ла f (akúla) → West Circassian: акул (akʷul) → Azerbaijani: akula → Bashkir: акула (akula) → Belarusian: аку́ла f (akúla) → Bulgarian: аку́ла f (akúla) → Bezhta: акула (akula) → Kazakh: акула (akula) → Kyrgyz: акула (akula) → Macedonian: ајкула f (ajkula) Serbo-Croatian: → Cyrillic script: а̏јкула f, а̏јкула f → Latin script: ȁjkula f → Tatar: акула (aqula) → Turkmen: akula → Ukrainian: аку́ла f (akúla) → Uyghur: ئاكۇلا (akula) → Uzbek: akula