draugr
Appearance
See also: Draugr
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]draugr (plural draugrs or draugar)
- (Norse mythology) An undead creature from Norse mythology, an animated corpse that inhabits its grave, often guarding buried treasure.
Translations
[edit]an undead creature from Norse mythology
Old Norse
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]From Proto-Germanic *draugaz (“delusion, mirage, illusion”). Akin to Old Saxon gidrog (“delusion”) and Old High German bitrog (“delusion”), gitrog (“ghost”). See also Finnish raukka.
Noun
[edit]draugr m (genitive draugs, plural draugar)
- (Norse mythology) ghost, spirit, undead
- Þáttr Þorsteins skelks, in 1827, S. Egilsson, Þ. Guðmundsson, Fornmanna sögur, Volume III. Copenhagen, page 200:
- Hann kyndir ofn brennanda, sagði draugrinn.
- "He kindles furnace's fire", said the ghost.
- Þáttr Þorsteins skelks, in 1827, S. Egilsson, Þ. Guðmundsson, Fornmanna sögur, Volume III. Copenhagen, page 200:
Declension
[edit] Declension of draugr (strong a-stem)
Descendants
[edit]- Icelandic: draugur
- Faroese: dreygur
- Norn: drog
- Norwegian: draug, drauv, drog
- Old Danish: drog
- Swedish: dröger, drög, draugr (dialectal, archaic)
- → Danish: drauge, dravge (learned)
- → English: draugr, draug (learned)
- English: Draugr
- → Swedish: draug (learned)}
Etymology 2
[edit]Possibly a nominalisation of Proto-Germanic *draugiz (though one would expect the vowel to display umlaut) or related to drjúgr.
Noun
[edit]draugr m
Descendants
[edit]- Icelandic: draugur
References
[edit]- “draugr”, in Geir T. Zoëga (1910) A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- draugr in An Icelandic-English Dictionary, R. Cleasby and G. Vigfússon, Clarendon Press, 1874, at Internet Archive.
- draugr in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, G. T. Zoëga, Clarendon Press, 1910, at Internet Archive.
- drög in Rietz, J. E. Svenskt dialektlexikon
Categories:
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English nouns with irregular plurals
- en:Norse mythology
- Old Norse terms with IPA pronunciation
- Old Norse terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Old Norse terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰrewgʰ- (deceive)
- Old Norse terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Old Norse terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Old Norse lemmas
- Old Norse nouns
- Old Norse masculine nouns
- non:Norse mythology
- Old Norse masculine a-stem nouns
- Old Norse poetic terms