drow
English
Etymology
A Shetlandic and Orcadian alteration of trow, most likely influenced by an unattested Norn *drog (“malevolent [undead] being”). Trow is derived from Norn troll, or otherwise from Old Norse trǫll. L-vocalisation occurred in the early 15th century in Middle Scots, so "trolly knolls" probably became "trowie knowes" around this time. The supposed Norn *drog would have been derived from Old Norse draugr.
Pronunciation
Noun
drow (plural drow)
- (fantasy role-playing games, countable) A member of a fictional race of dark elves in various fantasy settings, such as Dungeons & Dragons.
- (fantasy role-playing games, uncountable) A fictional constructed language spoken by the Drow.
- (rare, mythology, countable) A trow; a member of a race of folkloric beings from Orkney and Shetland; cognate to the Scandinavian troll[1].
Synonyms
- (a fictional race): dark elf
Translations
fictional dark elf
|
Drow language
folkloric being from Orkney and Shetlands
References
- “Dictionary of the Scots Language”, in (Please provide the title of the work), accessed 23 July 2012, archived from the original on 5 February 2012
Scots
Pronunciation
- (noun 1) IPA(key): [drʌu]
- noun 2 drou; dro͞o
- verb drou; drō
Noun
drow (plural drows)
Verb
drow (third-person singular present drows, present participle drowin, past drowt, past participle drowt)
- Alternative form of throw
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.