Dictionary Definition
hoy n : a flatbottom boat for carrying heavy
loads (especially on canals) [syn: barge, flatboat, lighter]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology 1
heu, or hui.Noun
Etymology 2
hui, compare ahoy.References
1913}}Spanish
Etymology
FromExtensive Definition
Hoy (from Old
Norse Háey meaning high island) is one of the Orkney
Islands in Scotland. With an
area of 55 square miles, it is the second largest of the Orkney
Islands after the Mainland.
It is connected by a causeway called The Ayre to South Walls,
to the south. Unusually, the two islands are treated as one entity
by the UK census.
The dramatic coastline of Hoy is what usually
greets visitors travelling to the Orkney Islands by ferry from the
Scottish mainland. It has extremes of many kinds: some of the
highest cliffs in the UK at St John's Head; the impressive and
famous sea stack, the Old Man of
Hoy; some of the most northerly surviving natural woodland in
the British Isles; the remote possibility that Arctic Char
survive in Heldale Water and the most northerly Martello
Towers, which were built to defend the area during the Napoleonic
War, but were never used in combat.
The highest point in Orkney, Ward
Hill, is found on Hoy.
The main naval base for Scapa Flow in
both the First and
Second
World Wars was situated at Lyness in the
south-east of the island. Some rather incongruous art deco
structures nearby date from this period.
An unusual rock-cut tomb, the Dwarfie
Stane, lies in a valley at the west of the island. It is unique
in northern Europe, bearing
similarity to Neolithic or
Bronze
Age tombs around the Mediterranean.
The northern part of the island is an RSPB reserve
due to its importance for birdlife, particularly Great skuas
and red-throated
divers.
In Norse
mythology, Hoy is the location of the never-ending battle
between Hedin
and Högni.
Orkney
Ferries serve the island with two routes. One links Lyness on
Hoy and Longhope
on South Walls with the island of Flotta and Houton on the
Orkney
Mainland. The other links Moaness in north
Hoy to the island of Graemsay and
Stromness
on Orkney Mainland.
hoy in German: Hoy (Orkney)
hoy in Spanish: Hoy (Escocia)
hoy in French: Hoy (Écosse)
hoy in Dutch: Hoy
hoy in Norwegian: Hoy
hoy in Norwegian Nynorsk: Hoy
hoy in Polish: Hoy
hoy in Swedish: Hoy