varg i veum
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
From Old Norse vargr í véum, literally "wolf in a sacred place". From vargr (“wolf; criminal, evildoer”), from Proto-Germanic *wargaz, and véum, dative plural of vé (“sanctuary”), from Proto-Germanic *wīhą.
References
- i veum “varg i veum” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Swedish
Etymology
A literary loan from Old Norse vargr í véum, literally ”criminal in a sacred place”. From vargr (“criminal, evildoer”), from Proto-Germanic *wargaz, and véum, dative plural of vé (“sacred place”), from Proto-Germanic *wīhą. The word varg is used here in its older sense ”criminal, evildoer”, but is identical to its general meaning ”wolf”, originally a taboo replacement word for ulv.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /varj ɪ ²veːɵm/
Noun
- (archaic) an outcast, a lawless criminal
- (archaic, by extension) an unwanted person, persona non grata
- 2008, Andreas Nyblom, Ryktbarhetens ansikte, page 218:
- Strindberg hade plötsligt blivit Gud för folket efter att länge ha varit varg i veum.
- Strindberg had suddenly become God for the people after having long been an outcast.
- 2019 March 6 [c. 1894], Annica Albertsson, “Borgarflickan som blev bolsjevik [The bourgeois girl who became a Bolshevik.]”, in Proletären:
- Själv skrev hon: ”Med ens brände jag mina skepp och stod oåterkalleligen bland samhällsomstörtarna, jag visste att jag nu var Varg i Veum inom mitt eget hem trots att jag älskade min man men starkare än alla hänsyn drev mig lusten att kämpa med i deras led. Glömma sig själv för idéerna. Hur oändligt härligt!”
- She wrote herself: "Suddenly, I burned my bridges and stood irreversibly among the revolutionaries. I knew that I was now an outcast in my own home, even though I loved my husband. But stronger than all considerations, the desire to fight alongside them compelled me. To forget oneself for the ideals. How infinitely splendid!"
References
- varg in Svenska Akademiens ordbok (SAOB)
- varg in Svensk ordbok (SO)
- varg in Elof Hellquist, Svensk etymologisk ordbok (1st ed., 1922)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.