mjöður
See also: mjøður
Icelandic
Etymology
From Old Norse mjǫðr, from Proto-Germanic *meduz, from Proto-Indo-European *médʰu (“sweet drink”).
Germanic cognates: Old Frisian mede, Middle Low German mēde, Dutch mede, Old High German meto (German Met) and Old English medu (whence mead).
Indo-European cognates: Sanskrit मधु (madhu), Ancient Greek μέθυ (méthu, “wine”), Latin medus, Old Irish mid, Welsh medd (“mead”), Old Church Slavonic медъ (medŭ, “honey”), Ukrainian мед (med, “honey”), Russian мёд (mjod, “honey, mead”), Lithuanian medùs (“honey”), Tocharian B mīt.
Compare also Finnish and Estonian mesi and the Hungarian méz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmjœːðʏr/
- Rhymes: -œːðʏr
Noun
mjöður m (genitive singular mjaðar, nominative plural miðir)
Declension
Derived terms
- bergja á miðinum
- blanda mjöð
- grasamjöður
- mjaðarangan
- mjaðarjurt
- mjaðarlyng
- mjaðartunna
- mjaðarþynnka
- mjöðdrekka
- mjöðdrykkja
- skáldamjöður
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