síga

Etymology
From, from. More at.

Verb

 * 1)  to sink, slowly descend
 * 2)  to descend by rope (e.g. when fetching eggs from bird cliffs)
 * 3)  to lower (someone) by rope
 * 4)  to subside

Etymology
From, from. More at.

Verb

 * 1)  to sink, to slowly descend
 * 2)  to subside
 * 3)  to descend by rope (e.g. when fetching eggs from bird cliffs)
 * 4)  to prolapse, to move out of place; especially for an internal organ to protrude beyond its normal position

Conjugation
Note: the past forms sé, sést are much less common than seig, seigst.

Derived terms

 * (to retreat)
 * það sígur á seinni hlutann (it is getting close to the end)
 * það sígur á hann svefn (he is falling asleep)
 * (to rapped down a cliff face)
 * það fór að síga í mig (I started getting angry)
 * (to collapse slowly)
 * (half-dried fish)
 * (past participle)
 * (past participle)