n na nb nc nd ne nf ng nh ni nj nk nl nm nn no np nr ns nt nu nv nw nx ny

Перевод: Norse speek Norse


[прилагательное]
норвежский; древнескандинавский;
[существительное]
норвежцы ; скандинавы ; норвежский язык


Тезаурус:

  1. But in recognition of Scotland's turbulent history, the Norse barn style was adopted for the far northern stations of Thurso and Wick.
  2. One cannot but be struck by the Spanishness of Toledo Station or the Dutchness of Amsterdam or the clean, bold, heroic lines of Helsinki Central, with its guardian giants so redolent of the spirit of Norse saga.
  3. Never having read a word of Norse (Old Icelandic) before, Lewis plunged in and attempted a few lines of Laxdaela Saga.
  4. Among the projects carried out were the creation of two folk museums, the laying out of public parks and gardens; a nature trail; a children's playground; the restoration of an old "Norse" mill, and the laying down of a car park for a small craft shop.
  5. This is a Norse custom and provides some interesting speculation.
  6. From the Old Norse Skratta, a goblin.
  7. Keld is a Norse word meaning "a spring" and the first settlers here could not have chosen a more appropriate name for there is always the sound of water; the little cluster of stone buildings occupies a headland thrust into the turbulent cataracts of the Swale, in infancy Yorkshire's most exuberant river.
  8. Yet there is here in the English highland zone an ancient Brigantian unity, later distinguished by the northern capital of the Roman Empire at York, concreted by the establishment of the boundary of Mercia-Northumbria and the specifically Norse occupation.
  9. There is also Scandinavian blood, introduced by Norse settlers, and the typical mottled faces of Scandinavian cattle can still be seen in Normandy.
  10. But the breed's origins are uncertain and the theories are numerous - that they are almost directly descended from the wild aurochs, for example (the claim of many a breed!) or are at least of Bos primigenius stock like the Podolians of the steppes, or are descended from large, long-horned continental cattle imported several centuries ago (some say by the Romans), or were imported 3,000-;4,000 years ago, or came from Ireland where they were an ancient indigenous type, or were developed from Dutch and old English breeds before the eighteenth century, or must have Norse origins because of their coat colour and pattern.
  11. So Randolph Henry Ash, ca 1840, when he was writing Ragnark , a poem in twelve books, which some saw as a Christianising of the Norse myth and some trounced as atheistic and diabolically despairing.
  12. Knut (Norse, ' The knot ')
  13. Viking influence is deep-seated, especially in naming, where the old Norse method of patronymics is used.

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