frakkar
Appearance
See also: Frakkar
Old Norse
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Germanic *frankô m (“spear, javelin; Frank”), whence also Old Norse frakka f (“spear”). The link between the name of a weapon and a Germanic people group is also seen with saxar m pl (“Saxons”) being derived from Proto-Germanic *sahsą (“knife, dagger”).
Noun
[edit]frakkar m pl
- (the) Franks
Declension
[edit] Declension of frakkar, (weak an-stem, plural only)
Derived terms
[edit]- frakkakonungr m (“king of the Franks”)
- Frakkland n (“land of the Franks; Francia”)
Related terms
[edit]- frakka f (“spear”)
Descendants
[edit]In mainland Scandinavian languages, the plural ar-ending of the nominative has been fixed to the word, as if it was a demonymic suffix (e.g. Nynorsk -ar or Bokmål -er). Thus they also exist in the singular form, where as Icelandic Frakkar does not.
See also
[edit]- saxar m pl (“Saxons”)
References
[edit]- “frakkar”, in Geir T. Zoëga (1910) A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press
Categories:
- Old Norse terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Old Norse terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *preng-
- Old Norse terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Old Norse terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Old Norse lemmas
- Old Norse nouns
- Old Norse masculine nouns
- Old Norse pluralia tantum
- Old Norse masculine an-stem nouns
- non:Demonyms
- non:Ethnonyms
- non:Germanic tribes