scill

scill, f.n: a shell, shellfish; the shell of an egg, a scale of a fish, serpent, etc. (SHILL / ˈʃɪl)

A fairly unconvincing but amusing drawing of a mollusk poking its head out of its spiky shell.
A collection of medical texts including Tractatus de herbis; Italy, c. 1280-1350; British Library, Egerton MS 747, f. 18v. [iiif.bl.uk]

ymb-fæþmian

ymb-fæþmian, wk.v: to embrace, clasp. (umb-FATH-mi-ahn / ymb-ˈfæθ-mɪ-an)

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Happy Hug A Medievalist Day! St Mary embracing St Elisabeth in the Psalter of Eleanor of Aquitaine; France, c. 1185; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, KB 76 F 13, f. 15r. [commons.wikimedia.org]

gnyrran

gnyrran, wk.v: (of the teeth) to gnash, grind, chatter. (G’NUR-rahn / ˈgnyr-ran)

Medieval manuscript illustration of a fish with large tusks and lots of teeth leaping over a current of water.
A fish known as an exposita from Jacob van Maerlant’s Der Naturen Bloeme; Flanders, c. 1350; Koninklijke Bibliotheek, KB, KA 16, f. 105v. [bestiary.ca]