Middle Earth

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English middelerthe, myddyl erthe; an alteration of earlier middel-erde, middelerd; in turn an alteration of earlier middenerd; from Old English middaneard (Middle Earth), variant of middanġeard (Earth, the world, literally the middle yard, enclosure, or realm) mis- or reinterpreting its meaning, from Proto-Germanic *midjagardaz, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *medhyo (middle) and Proto-Indo-European *ghartos (enclosure). Cognate with Norwegian & English Midgard (q.v.) and Danish, Norwegian, & Swedish Midgård.

Proper noun

Middle Earth

  1. (archaic) The Earth, (chiefly Norse mythology) synonym for Midgard, the world of traditional Germanic cosmology, conceived as a realm between heaven (Asgard) and hell (Niflheim).
  2. (fiction) Alternative form of Middle-earth: the setting of the Lord of the Rings series.

Translations

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