Concept cluster: History > Norse Mythology & Literature
n
The Sayings of Alvís (or) The Sayings of the All-Wise; the tenth poem of the Poetic Edda.
n
Alternative form of Annwn [(mythology) The otherworld in Welsh mythology, a place of delights and eternal youth.]
n
Alternative form of Annwn [(mythology) The otherworld in Welsh mythology, a place of delights and eternal youth.]
n
Alternative form of Arvak [(Norse mythology) One of the two horses drawing the chariot bearing the sun.]
n
(uncommon) The Æsir.
n
The Dreams of Baldur; the eleventh book of the Poetic Edda.
n
An Old English epic poem written circa 1025.
n
A collection of Old Norse poems and tales from two medieval manuscripts found in Iceland.
n
(grammar, linguistic morphology) Paragogic nu /ν/ (n), understood as an allomorph of certain Greek morphemic forms otherwise terminating in vowels /ε/ (e) or /ι/ (i), viz. third person verb and third declension dative plural noun forms, phonemically represented as -ε(ν) (-e(n)) and -ῐ(ν) (-i(n)). An early Attic–Ionic innovation, nu paragoge spread through the Hellenic world; inclusion or omission of /ν/ in ancient inscriptions is so variable and unpredictable as to suggest morphemes with and without /ν/ occurred in free variation, not bound to the prescriptive rules of phonetic harmony codified by later Byzantine grammarians.
n
a book of the Poetic Edda.
n
(Irish mythology) A member of the semi-divine race that were said to have inhabited Ireland in ancient times.
n
An Old Norse alliterative verse form used largely in the Poetic Edda, consisting of two lifts per half-line.
n
(Norse mythology) The Æsir god of justice
n
Alternative form of Fólkvangr [(Norse mythology) A meadow or field ruled over by the goddess Freyja, the afterlife for half of those people dying in combat, the other half going to Valhalla.]
n
A fylfot.
n
A book of the Poetic Edda.
n
a book of the Poetic Edda.
n
(historical) Beowulf's predecessor.
n
A synonym used in Old Norse poetry in place of the normal word for something; a poetic epithet.
n
A local leader in early mediaeval Norway.
n
In Norse and Icelandic culture, a duel to the death.
n
A semi-legendary Danish king living around the early sixth century CE.
n
(Norwegian folklore) Such beings collectively.
n
A book of the Poetic Edda.
n
a book of the Poetic Edda.
n
A book of the Poetic Edda.
n
The Sayings of the High One; the second book of the Poetic Edda.
n
Alternative form of Cimmerian [(Greek mythology) Any of the mythical people supposed to inhabit a land of perpetual darkness.]
n
A book of the Poetic Edda.
n
a human
n
Alternative spelling of Mjollnir [(Norse mythology) The hammer of the Norse god Thor.]
n
(Mesopotamian mythology) Synonym of Nanna (god of the moon)
n
A female mediaeval Scandinavian or Viking.
n
A collection of Old Norse poems, songs, and some prose, containing stories about the Norse gods and legendary heroes.
n
a book of the Poetic Edda.
n
An ancient Nordic poet; a skald.
n
Alternative spelling of Sessrúmnir [(Norse mythology) Freyja's hall in the Fólkvangr, her room for half of the those slain on the battlefield.]
n
(historical) The skill of writing Nordic poetry of the Viking Age.
n
(Norse mythology) the Norn of the future
n
a book of the Poetic Edda.
n
a section of the Poetic Edda, encompassing two books : the Grógaldr and the Fjölsvinnsmál.
n
(Melanesian mythology) A lunar deity.
n
One of the three Norns; the Norn of those who were.
n
a book of the Poetic Edda.
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An inhabitant of Valhalla.
n
Members of the Swedish royal family whose ancestry is traditionally traced to one of the Vanir deities.
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(Germanic paganism) A sorcerer in Norse Heathen societies.
n
Abbreviation of Völuspá. [The Prophecy of the Vǫlva; the first poem of the Poetic Edda.]
n
a book of the Poetic Edda.
n
The Prophecy of the Vǫlva; the first poem of the Poetic Edda.
n
A book of the Poetic Edda.
n
(Slavic mythology) Polabian god of war worshipped in Wolgast and Havelberg
n
The Lay of Thrym; a poem of the Poetic Edda.

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