See also: <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> <span class="searchmatch">hjupa</span> f (definite singular <span class="searchmatch">hjupa</span>, indefinite plural hjuper or hjupor, definite plural hjupene or hjupone) definite singular of hjupe (pre-2012)...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">hjupa</span> From Old Norse <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span>, from Proto-Germanic *heupǭ (compare Dutch joop, German Hiefe, dialectal Norwegian <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> (“briar”)), from Proto-Indo-European...
<span class="searchmatch">hjupa</span> From Old Norse *<span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span>, from Proto-Germanic *heupǭ. Doublet of nype. Cognates include Faroese and Icelandic <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span>, Danish hyben and Swedish nypon...
active present subjunctive of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> third-person singular active present subjunctive of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> third-person plural active present subjunctive of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span>...
hjúpur nominative/accusative plural indefinite of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> IPA(key): /ˈçuːpʏr/ Rhymes: -uːpʏr hjúpur m (genitive singular hjúps, nominative plural hjúpar)...
plural indefinite of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> hjúpum indefinite dative plural of hjúpur hjúpum first-person plural active present indicative of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> first-person plural...
nominative plural of hjúpur hjúpar second-person singular active present indicative of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> third-person singular active present indicative of <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span>...
steinnypa From earlier form steinhjupa, a compound of stein (“rock, stone”) + <span class="searchmatch">hjupa</span> (“rosehip”). steinnype f (definite singular steinnypa, indefinite plural...
nominative plural), from Old Norse *<span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span>, from Proto-Germanic *heupǭ. Compare Danish hyben, Norwegian nype, <span class="searchmatch">hjupa</span>, Old Saxon hiopo, Old High German hiufo...
Wikipedia nn njupa, njupe, nypa Doublet of hjupe, descending from Old Norse <span class="searchmatch">hjúpa</span> (“a coat”), from Proto-Germanic *heupǭ. The initial n- may have come from...