Use "old norse" in a sentence

1. Check 'Amnia' translations into Old Norse

2. Learn more about Old Norse Bynames here

3. Anaesthetize translation in English-Old Norse dictionary

4. Aeric is an alternate form of Eric (Old Norse)

5. From Old Norse Buskr, from Proto-Germanic *buskaz.

6. All from Proto-Germanic *Biton (source also of Old Saxon Biti, Old Norse Bit

7. Cognate with Old Norse bleza (“ to bless ”) (whence Icelandic Blessa), Old English blēdan (“ to bleed ”)

8. Balder, Old Norse Baldr, in Norse mythology, the son of the chief god Odin and his wife Frigg

9. From Middle English Bagge, borrowed from Old Norse Baggi (“Bag, pack, satchel, bundle”), related to Old Norse bǫggr (“harm, shame; load, burden”), of uncertain origin

10. In Old Norse, the use of Bynames was quite common

11. Compare Old English betest, Betst, Old Frisian Betsta, Dutch best, Old High German bezzisto, Old Norse beztr, Gothic 𐌱𐌰𐍄𐌹𐍃𐍄𐍃 (batists).

12. History and Etymology for Carl Middle English, borrowed from Old Norse karl "man, commoner" — more at churl Note: Old Norse karl is already reflected in the late Old English compounds hūsCarl "member of a king's bodyguard" (Old Norse húskarl), Carlmann "male, …

13. Astride is an alternate form of Astrid (Old Norse): Scandinavian name

14. Balder's name is of Old Norse origin, meaning "prince"

15. Middle English, from Old English eom; akin to Old Norse em Am, Latin sum, Greek eimi

16. Baldur (pronounced “BALD-er;” Old Norse Baldr, Old English and Old High German Balder) is one of the Aesir gods

17. In the context of English, Old Norse was a significant Adstratum to it, so significant that English borrowed a pronoun from Old Norse - the third person plural pronoun, they.

18. The inherited form of alliterative verse was modified somewhat in Old Norse poetry.

19. Byrlaw is attested earlier in English but is unattested in Old Norse and the

20. Etymology 'Berrier' means 'hill shieling' - from Old English (OE) 'berg', 'hill', and Old Norse (ON)'erg' 'shieling', 'hill pasture'

21. The surname is derived from either the Old English word busc (bush) or the Old Norse word Buskr (bush)

22. 1200, Bagge, probably from Old Norse Baggi "pack, bundle," or a similar Scandinavian source

23. Old Norse kura, Danish, Norwegian kure, Swedish kura).Thus unrelated to coward.Related: Cowered; cowering.

24. [From Middle English Blunderen, to go blindly, perhaps from Old Swedish blundra, have one's eyes closed, from Old Norse blunda.]

25. 1 English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bushy area or thicket, from Middle English bush(e) ‘bush’ (probably from Old Norse Buskr, or an unrecorded Old English busc); alternatively, it may derive from Old Norse Buski used as a personal name

26. 1 English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bushy area or thicket, from Middle English bush(e) ‘bush’ (probably from Old Norse Buskr, or an unrecorded Old English busc); alternatively, it may derive from Old Norse Buski used as a personal name

27. English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bushy area or thicket, from Middle English bush(e) ‘bush’ (probably from Old Norse Buskr, or an unrecorded Old English busc); alternatively, it may derive from Old Norse Buski used as a personal name

28. Bush itself is a thicket of Scandinavian (Old Norse Buskr), Germanic (Old High German busc), and Romanic (Medieval Latin busca) influences and cognates

29. Cognate with Old Frisian ēvend, Old Saxon avand, āƀand (Low Low German Avend), Old Dutch avont (Dutch avond), Old High German āband (German Abend), Old Norse aptann, aptunn, eptann (Danish aften, Swedish afton)

30. Bren is an alternate form of Brenda (Old Norse): related to the English word "brand"

31. Or "lens" which comes from the Latin "lentil" or "window" meaning "eye of wind" in old Norse?

32. Asgard (Old NorseÁsgarðr, “Enclosure of theAesir) is one of theNine Worlds of Norse mythology and the home and fortress of the Aesir, one of the two tribes of gods

33. English: habitational name from a place in North Yorkshire, recorded in Domesday Book as Buschebi, from Old Norse Buskr ‘bush’, ‘shrub’ or an Old Norse personal name Buski + býr ‘homestead’, ‘village’, or from some other place so called

34. Berserker, Norwegian berserk, Old Norse Berserkr (“bearskin”), in premedieval and medieval Norse and Germanic history and folklore, a member of unruly warrior gangs that worshipped Odin, the supreme Norse deity, and attached themselves to royal and noble courts as bodyguards and shock troops.

35. Collop is an old Norse word of which a close modern relative is the Swedish kalops, a meat stew

36. In Scandinavia, the old Scandinavian religion contained human sacrifice, as both the Norse sagas and German historians relate.

37. Boatswain (n.) mid-15c., from late Old English batswegen, from bat "boat" (see boat (n.)) + Old Norse sveinn "boy" (see swain).

38. Old English bearm; related to beran to bear, Old Norse Barmr Barm, Gothic Barms, Old High German Barm see ferment Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William …

39. Habitational name from a place in North Yorkshire, recorded in Domesday Book as Buschebi, from Old Norse Buskr "bush, shrub" or an Old Norse personal name Buski and býr "homestead, village", or from some other place so called.

40. [Middle English bir, favorable wind, from Old Norse byrr; see bher- in Indo-European roots.] Birr 2 (bîr) n

41. [Middle English Basken, to bathe oneself (in warm liquid), wallow, perhaps from Old Norse badhask, to bathe oneself : badha, to bathe (akin

42. The writing of the Westrogothic law marked the beginning of Early Old Swedish (klassisk fornsvenska or äldre fornsvenska; 1225–1375), which had developed from Old East Norse.

43. [Middle English bir, favorable wind, from Old Norse byrr; see bher- in Indo-European roots.] Birr 2 (bîr) n

44. The Norse god of mischief.

45. The yeasty froth on fermenting malt liquors an archaic or dialect word for yeast Word Origin for barm Old English bearm; related to beran to bear, Old Norse barmr barm, Gothic Barms, Old High German barm …

46. The name of the hamlet derives from the Old Norse Saetr Buskr, which means "the bush by the shieling"

47. It is related to the Old Saxon and Old High German busc, Dutch bosch, bos, German Busch, as well as to the Old Norse Buskr and the Danish busk (all of these mean ‘bush’)

48. Borrowed from Old Norse Æsir, plural of áss "(pagan) god, member of the Aesir," going back to Germanic *ansu-

49. Ivar the Boneless (Old Norse Ívarr hinn Beinlausi) is known from Old Norse and medieval Latin sources as the son of the legendary Viking king Ragnar Lothbrok, in these stories raiding alongside his father and brothers and becoming the ruler of York in England in the 9th century CE.

50. [Middle English Bawlen, to bark, from Medieval Latin baulāre, to bark (probably of Scandinavian origin) or from Old Norse baula, to low (of imitative origin).]

51. What does Aeric mean? A eric as a name for boys has its root in Old Norse, and the name Aeric means "complete ruler"

52. The Vanir (Old Norse Vanir, pronounced “VAN-ir”) are one of the two principal tribes of deities featured in Norse mythology.(The other tribe is the Aesir.)Among their ranks are Freya, Freyr, Njord, and arguably the early Germanic goddess Nerthus as well

53. The surname Bush is an English surname, derived from either the Old English word "busc" or the Old Norse "Buskr," both of which mean "bush," a shrub.

54. The Berserkers were Germanic in origin, were commonly reported in Old Norse literature and historians believe that either they entered a stage of rage before entering the

55. Leaders of a Norse paganist hate group.

56. The Aesir (pronounced “ICE-ir”; Old Norse Æsir for multiple gods, Ásynjur for multiple goddesses, Áss for one god, and Ásynja for one goddess) were one of the two main tribes of deities venerated by the pre-Christian Norse

57. Noun zoology any of several rails that occur in the Old World, such as the cornCrake and the spotted Crake Word Origin for Crake C14: from Old Norse krāka crow or krākr raven, of imitative origin

58. Blunt and blunder ("make a stupid mistake") may have the same origins — the Old Norse blundra, meaning "to shut one's eyes."

59. A man who has just been or is about to be married Word Origin for Bridegroom C14: changed (through influence of groom) from Old English brӯdguma, from brӯd bride 1 + guma man; related to Old Norse

60. [Old Norse Althing, parliament, whole assembly : allr, all; see al- in Indo-European roots + thing, assembly .] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

61. Middle English: probably from obsolete Byrlaw ‘local law or custom’, from Old Norse býjar, genitive singular of býr ‘town’, but associated with by

62. What does Astride mean? A stride as a girls' name is of Old Norse origin, and the meaning of the name Astride is "beautiful goddess"

63. How Christmas Baptizes Norse Mythology Into Powerful Christian Archetypes

64. Everyday English vocabulary remained mostly Germanic, with Old Norse influence becoming Apparent. Once Wheeler's confession became Apparent, the other members of the gang fled their usual haunts

65. [Middle English Bawlen, to bark, from Medieval Latin baulāre, to bark (probably of Scandinavian origin) or from Old Norse baula, to low (of imitative origin).] bawl′er n

66. The speech of eastern and northern parts of England was subject to strong Old Norse influence due to Scandinavian rule and settlement beginning in the 9th century.

67. Word Origin Middle English: probably from obsolete Byrlaw ‘local law or custom’, from Old Norse býjar, genitive singular of býr ‘town’, but associated with by

68. Aesir definition is - the principal race of Norse gods

69. Asgard definition is - the home of the Norse gods.

70. Bide (v.) Old English bidan "to stay, continue, live, remain," also "to trust, rely," from Proto-Germanic *bidan "to await" (source also of Old Norse biða, Old Saxon bidan, Old Frisian bidia, Middle Dutch Biden, Old High German bitan, Gothic beidan "to wait"), which is of uncertain origin

71. Piet Hein (16 December 1905 – 17 April 1996) was a Danish polymath (mathematician, inventor, designer, author and poet), often writing under the Old Norse pseudonym Kumbel, meaning "tombstone".

72. Origin of Blatherskite blather dialectal skite a contemptible person (from Middle English skite diarrhea) (from Old Norse skītr excrement) (from skīta to defecate skei- in Indo-European roots) From American …

73. Battable, from Middle English batten, from the Old Norse verb batna, means to improve, often applied to pasture lands, indicating their fertility and their propensity for fattening cattle

74. Middle English blemisshen, to damage, injure, sully, from Anglo-French blemiss-, stem of blemir, blesmir, from Old French, literally, to make pale by wounding, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German blas ros horse with a blaze, Old Norse blesi blaze — more at blaze Learn More about Blemish …

75. Middle English Anelen to set on fire, from Old English onǣlan, from on + ǣlan to set on fire, burn, from āl fire; akin to Old English ǣled fire, Old Norse eldr Learn More about anneal Time Traveler for anneal The first known use of anneal was in 1664

76. The 1960 discovery proved the pre-Columbian Norse exploration of mainland North America.

77. Origin of Badderlocks Perhaps Baldr's locks, after the Norse god.

78. The Norse sagas present Harald in a rather negative light.

79. Baleful (adj.) Old English bealufull "dire, wicked, cruel," with -ful + bealu "harm, injury, ruin, evil, mischief, wickedness, a noxious thing," from Proto-Germanic *balu- (source also of Old Saxon balu, Old Frisian balu "evil," Old High German balo "destruction," Old Norse bol, Gothic balwjan "to torment"), a word of uncertain etymology.

80. According to William J. Watson, Skibo is the anglicisation of Scottish Gaelic Sgìobal, which in turn comes from an Old Norse name meaning either firewood-steading or Skithi's steading.