hákarl
English
    
    
Icelandic
    
    Etymology
    
From Old Norse hákarl (“a shark”), há- (“marks fish of the shark kind”) + karl (“a man”). Related to háfur (“a dogfish”) and hár (“dogfish”).[1] Compare the Faroese hákallur[1] 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
    
Declension
    
Derived terms
    
Derived terms
- beinhákarl
- háki
- háksi
- kæstur hákarl
Related terms
    
- háskerðingur
See also
    
References
    
- Ásgeir Blöndal Magnússon — Íslensk orðsifjabók, (1989). Reykjavík, Orðabók Háskólans. (Available on Málið.is under the “Eldra mál” tab.)
Old Norse
    
    Etymology
    
See Icelandic hákarl. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term. The Icelandic word comes from Old Norse, why should I have to see Icelandic for the etymology?
Pronunciation
    
- (12th Century Icelandic) IPA(key): /hɑ̃ːˌkarl/
Declension
    
Descendants
    
- → Middle Dutch: haeye
- 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)
- → Adyghe: 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)
- → Tatar: акула (aqula)
- → Turkmen: akula
- → Ukrainian: аку́ла f (akúla)
- → Uyghur: ئاكۇلا (akula)
- → Uzbek: akula
 
 
- Russian: аку́ла f (akúla)
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