- fist", from
hnefi ("fist") + tafl,
where "fist"
referred to the
central king-piece. The
precise etymology is not
entirely certain but
hnefi certainly referred...
-
Hnefi eða
vitstola orð (in the author's translation, Fist or
words bereft of sense) is the
sixth poetry book by Eiríkur Örn Norðdahl,
published by Mál...
- Gor
Gudmund Gylfi Hagbard Haki Half
Harek Heiti Hemlir Hiorolf Hjalmar Hnefi Hogni Homar Horvi Hraudnir Hraudung Hun
Hunding Hviting Hæmir
Iorek Kilmund...
-
before l, n and r; thus
whereas Old
Icelandic m****cripts
might use the form
hnefi, "fist", Old
Norwegian m****cripts
might use nefi. From the late 13th century...
- Ubbi fríski slew Rǫgnvaldr hái at Brávellir, a man also
known as Raðbarðr
hnefi. This
slain figure equates to Rǫgnvaldr (Regnaldus), a
figure attested by...
-
originally a
historical person, but
absent from
Danish sources.
Possibly from ON
hnefi, Old
Swedish næfve ("fist"). King of the Danes, brother-in-law of Finn1...
-
hnefi, Latin:
Regnaldus rutenus For Rognvald, see
Rognvald above, and for Ráðbarðr, see Ráðbarðr, above. The
cognomen hái
means "the tall", and
hnefi...
- Mál og menning, 2017) Plokkfiskbókin (Reykjavík : Mál og menning, 2016)
Hnefi eða
vitstola orð, Mál & menning, 2013 IWF! IWF! OMG! OMG!, a collection...