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Some Related Sentences
Norse and mythology

The conception that diseases
and death come
from invisible shots sent by supernatural beings
, or magicians
is common in Germanic
and Norse mythology.

Category: Locations in
Norse mythology

Alfheim (,
" elf home
") is one
of the Nine Worlds
and home
of the Light Elves in
Norse mythology and appears also in Anglo-Scottish ballads under
the form Elfhame
( Elphame
, Elfame ) as a fairyland
, sometimes modernized as Elfland
( Elfinland
, Elvenland ).

Category: Locations in
Norse mythology
In Norse mythology, Ask
and Embla
( from Old Norse Askr ok Embla )— male
and female respectively — were
the first two humans
, created by
the gods
.

Ægir
( Old Norse " sea
") is a sea giant
, god
of the ocean
and king
of the sea creatures in
Norse mythology.

*
Norse mythology

The word aegis
is identified with protection by a strong force with its roots in Greek
mythology and adopted by
the Romans ; there are parallels in
Norse mythology and in Egyptian
mythology as well
, where
the Greek word aegis
is applied by extension
.
In Norse mythology, the dragon Fafnir
( best known in
the form
of a dragon slain by Sigurðr ) bears on his forehead
the Ægis-helm
( ON ægishjálmr ), or Ægir's helmet
, or more specifically
the " Helm
of Terror ".
In Norse mythology, Bifröst
( or sometimes Bilröst )
is a burning rainbow bridge that reaches between Midgard
( the world )
and Asgard
, the realm
of the gods
.

Scholars have proposed that
the bridge may have originally represented
the Milky Way
and have noted parallels between
the bridge
and another bridge in
Norse mythology, Gjallarbrú
.

Baldr
( also Balder
, Baldur )
is a god in
Norse mythology.
In Norse mythology, Breiðablik
( Broad-gleaming )
is the home
of Baldr
.

Category: Locations in
Norse mythology

Bilskirnir
( Old Norse " lightning-crack
") is the hall
of the god Thor in
Norse mythology.

Category: Locations in
Norse mythology

Category: Artifacts in
Norse mythology

Bragi
is the skaldic god
of poetry in
Norse mythology.
Norse and from

According to The American Heritage Dictionary
of the English Language
, Asgard
is derived
from Old Norse āss
, god + garðr
, enclosure ;
from Indo-European roots ansu-spirit
, demon
( see cognate ahura ) + gher-grasp
, enclose
( see cognates garden
and yard ).< ref >; See also ansu-and gher -< sup > 1 </ sup > in
" Appendix I: Indo-European Roots
" in
the same work .</ ref >
( from Icelandic for
" Æsir faith ", pronounced
, in
Old Norse )
is a form
of Germanic neopaganism which developed in
the United States
from the 1970s
.

The first known use
of the word ball in English in
the sense
of a globular body that
is played with was in 1205 in in
the phrase
, "" The word came
from the Middle English bal
( inflected as ball-e ,-es
, in turn
from Old Norse böllr
( pronounced ; compare
Old Swedish baller
, and Swedish boll )
from Proto-Germanic ballu-z
, ( whence probably Middle High German bal
, ball-es
, Middle Dutch bal ), a cognate with
Old High German ballo
, pallo
, Middle High German balle
from Proto-Germanic * ballon
( weak masculine ),
and Old High German ballâ
, pallâ
, Middle High German balle
, Proto-Germanic * ballôn
( weak feminine ).

The word black comes
from Old English blæc (" black
, dark ", also
, " ink "),
from Proto-Germanic * blakkaz (" burned "),
from Proto-Indo-European * bhleg-(" to burn
, gleam
, shine
, flash "),
from base * bhel-(" to shine "), related to
Old Saxon blak (" ink "),
Old High German blah (" black "),
Old Norse blakkr (" dark "), Dutch blaken (" to burn "),
and Swedish bläck (" ink ").

For example
, the English words shirt
and skirt are doublets ;
the former derives
from the Old English sċyrte
, while
the latter
is loaned
from Old Norse skyrta
, both
of which derive
from the Proto-Germanic * skurtjōn -.
In some cases
, such as
" shirt
" and " skirt ", one
of the cognate pairs has an ultimate source in another language related to English
, while
the other one
is native
, as happened with many loanwords
from Old Norse borrowed during
the Danelaw
.

Crannogs were used as dwellings over five millennia
from the European Neolithic Period
, to as late as
the 17th / early 18th century although in Scotland
, convincing evidence for Early
and Middle Bronze Age or
Norse Period use
is not currently present in
the archaeological record
.

The name
" dill
" comes
from Old English dile
, thought to have originated
from a
Norse or Anglo-Saxon word dylle meaning to soothe or lull
, the plant having
the carminative property
of relieving gas
.

Danish
, together with Swedish
, derives
from the East
Norse dialect group
, while
the old Norwegian dialects before
the influence
of Danish
and Bokmål
is classified as a West
Norse language together with Faroese
and Icelandic
.
Norse and Old
In Norse religion
, Asgard
( Old Norse: Ásgarðr ; meaning
" Enclosure
of the Æsir
") is one
of the Nine Worlds
and is the country or capital city
of the Norse Gods surrounded by an incomplete wall attributed to a Hrimthurs riding
the stallion Svaðilfari
, according to Gylfaginning
.

One
of them
, Múnón
, married Priam's daughter
, Tróán
, and had by her a son
, Trór
, to be pronounced Thor in
Old Norse.

Álfheim as an abode
of the Elves
is mentioned only twice in
Old Norse texts
.

* Gylfaginning in
Old Norse
Old Norse askr literally means
" ash tree
" but
the etymology
of embla
is uncertain
, and two possibilities
of the meaning
of embla are generally proposed
.
is an Icelandic
( and equivalently
Old Norse ) term consisting
of two parts
.

The term
is the Old Norse / Icelandic translation
of, a neologism coined in
the context
of 19th century romantic nationalism
, used by Edvard Grieg in his 1870 opera Olaf Trygvason
.
( plural ),
the term used to identify those who practice Ásatrú
is a compound with
( Old Norse )
" man ".

A Goði or Gothi
( plural goðar )
is the historical
Old Norse term for a priest
and chieftain in
Norse paganism
.

Ægir
is an
Old Norse word meaning
" terror
" and the name
of a destructive giant associated with
the sea ; ægis
is the genitive
( possessive ) form
of ægir
and has no direct relation to Greek aigis
.

The exact derivation
is unclear
, with
the Old English fiæll or feallan
and the Old Norse fall all being possible candidates
.

Bornholm (;
Old Norse: Burgundaholmr
, " the island
of the Burgundians
") is a Danish island in
the Baltic Sea located to
the east
of ( most
of )
the rest
of Denmark
, south
of Sweden
, and north
of Poland
.

This would have been a burial fitting a king who was famous for his wealth in
Old Norse sources
.
Norse and flaming

A
flaming sword with immense destructive power appears in
Norse mythology.
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