Svalbarð
See also: Svalbard
Faroese
Etymology
From Old Norse Svalbarð, from svalr (“cool”) + barð (“edge, brim”), thus roughly meaning “cold shore”. Cognate with Icelandic Svalbarði and Norwegian Svalbard. Probably a learned borrowing through Norwegian, because the original meaning of the Old Norse word is uncertain, but, according to Nansen and Alexander Bugge, may be the same as the modern Svalbard archipelago. [1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsvalpɛaːɹ/
Declension
Singular | |
Indefinite | |
Nominative | Svalbarð |
Accusative | Svalbarð |
Dative | Svalbarði |
Genitive | Svalbarðs |
Derived terms
- svalbarðsgás (“pink-footed goose”)
References
- R. Hennig (1925) Von rätselhaften Ländern : Versunkene Stätten der Geschichte
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