salr

Old Norse

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *saliz (house, hall). Cognate with Old English sele, first part of Old Frisian selskip, also Old Saxon seli, Old High German sali and first part of selihūs and selihof.
Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *sol-, *sel- (human settlement, village, dwelling).

Pronunciation

  • (12th century Icelandic) IPA(key): /ˈsɑlr̩/

Noun

salr m (genitive salar, plural salir)

  1. room, hall
    • Vǫluspá, verse 4, lines 5-6, in 1860, T. Möbius, Edda Sæmundar hins fróða: mit einem Anhang zum Theil bisher ungedruckter Gedichte. Leipzig, page 1:
      [] sól skein sunnan / á salar steina, []
      [] sun shone from the south / upon the stones of the halls. []

Declension

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Norwegian Bokmål: sal m
  • Norwegian Nynorsk: sal m
  • Swedish: sal c

References

  • salr in Geir T. Zoëga (1910) A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • salr in An Icelandic-English Dictionary, R. Cleasby and G. Vigfússon, Clarendon Press, 1874, at Internet Archive.
  • salr in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, G. T. Zoëga, Clarendon Press, 1910, at Internet Archive.
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