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Page "Norse" ¶ 3
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Some Related Sentences

** and Norse
** Poetic Edda No particular authorship ; oral tradition of the Norse
** Heithabyr is an English spelling of the Old Norse name.
** Norse paganism
** Norse art
** Norse activity in the British Isles
** The extinct Greenlandic Norse language
** The sons of Borr slaying the primeval giant Ymir in Norse mythology
** A daughter of the god Fornjót in Norse mythology
** Jarl ( mythology ), in Norse Mythology, a son of the god Ríg
** Loch Broom ( fjord ), Loch Eriboll ( fjord ), Loch Fyne ( fjord ), Loch Hourn ( fjord ), Loch Tarbert, Jura ( fjord ), Loch Torridon ( fjord ); Loch Sween, a fjord, The Minch ( Strait, " Skotlandsfjörð " (" Scotland's fjord / firth ") in Old Norse.
** Proto-Germanic * jēraN (" year ") > North / West Germanic * jāraN > North Germanic * āra > Old Norse ár, and > West Germanic * jāra > Old High German jār, Old English ġēar.
** Proto-Germanic * gebō (" gift ", ) > North / West Germanic * gebu > North Germanic * gjavu > ( by u-umlaut ) * gjǫvu > Old Norse gjǫf, and > West Germanic * gebu > Old English giefu.
** Proto-Germanic * tungōN (" tongue ", ) > late North / West Germanic * tungā > * tunga > Old Norse tunga, Old High German zunga, Old English tunge ( unstressed a > e ).
** Proto-Germanic * gebōz (" of a gift ", ) > late North / West Germanic * gebāz > North Germanic * gjavaz > Old Norse gjafar, and > West Germanic * geba > Old High German geba, Old English giefe ( unstressed a > e ).
** Proto-Germanic * twajjôN (" of two ") > Old Norse tveggja, Gothic twaddjē, but > Old High German zweiio
** Proto-Germanic * band (" I / he bound ") > * bant > Old West Norse batt, Old East Norse bant, but Old English band
** Proto-Germanic * nahtuN (" night ", accusative ) > * nāttu > ( by u-umlaut ) * nǭttu > Old Norse nótt
** Proto-Germanic * sairaz (" sore ") > * sāraz > * sārz > Old Norse sárr, but > * seira > Old High German sēr.
** With original Proto-Germanic * gaizaz > * geizz > Old Norse geirr.
** Proto-Germanic * bindanaN > * bindan > Old Norse binda, but > Old English bindan.
** This also affected stressed syllables: Proto-Germanic * in > Old Norse í
** Proto-Germanic * wulfaz > early North Germanic wulfaz > late ulfz > Old Norse ulfr
** Giants ( Norse mythology )

** and mythology
** " Christian mythology ".
** Epic of Gilgamesh ( Mesopotamian mythology )
** Atrahasis ( Mesopotamian mythology )
** Enuma Elish ( Babylonian mythology )
** Mahābhārata, ascribed to Vyasa ( Hindu mythology )
** Ramayana, ascribed to Valmiki ( Hindu mythology )
** Iliad, ascribed to Homer ( Greek mythology )
** Odyssey, ascribed to Homer ( Greek mythology )
** Works and Days, ascribed to Hesiod ( Greek mythology )
** Theogony, ascribed to Hesiod ( Greek mythology )
** Catalogue of Women, ascribed to Hesiod ( Greek mythology )
** Shield of Heracles, ascribed to Hesiod ( Greek mythology )
** Aeneid by Virgil ( Roman mythology )
** Metamorphoses by Ovid ( Greek and Roman mythology )
** Argonautica by Gaius Valerius Flaccus ( Roman poet, Greek mythology )
** Thebaid and Achilleid by Statius ( Roman poet, Greek mythology )
** Kalevala by Elias Lönnrot ( 1849 Finnish mythology )
** Kalevipoeg by Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald ( 1853 Estonian mythology )
** Galatea, a sea-nymph in Ovid's story of Acis and Galatea ( mythology )
** Galatea, name given in the 18th century to the animated statue sculpted by Pygmalion ( mythology )
** Slavic mythology
** Joseph Campbell, American author on mythology ( d. 1987 )
** Maya mythology, the myths and legends of the Maya civilization
** Mbombo of Bakuba mythology, who vomited out the world upon feeling a stomach ache

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