í nótt
21nott — adjective /nɒt/ Of an animal: having no horns; polled. For these and other reasons farmers who occupy good land in the vale with their hill farms are getting tired of the horned sheep, and use their hill farms only as summering ground for nott… …
22Nott — Recorded in the spellings of Knott, Nott, Note, Nuth, and the diminutive Nottle, this English medieval surname has three possible origins. The first is as a nickname for a thickset person, from the pre 7th century Olde English cnotta meaning a… …
23NOTT — The University of Nottingham (GB, http://www.nott.ac.uk/) …
24nött — • sliten, skavd, skör, trasig, fransig • luggsliten, nött, trådsliten, blanksliten, skamfilad, trasig …
25NOTT — The University of Nottingham (GB, http://www.nott.ac.uk/) …
26NOTT — Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy Trial …
27Nótt — Nọ́tt, altnordische Mythologie: Personifizierung der Nacht, eine Riesentochter, die in ihrem von dem Hengst Hrimfaxi gezogenen Wagen ihrem Sohn Dagr (Tag) jeweils um zwölf Stunden voraus über den Himmel fährt …
28Nott — (‘Night’) In Nordic myth a giantess and the mother of Dag (day). Her horse was Hrimfaxi (‘frost mane’) …
29NOTT — • Nocturnal Oxygen Therapy Trial …
30nott — ˈnät, usu äd.+V dialect variant of not …