-
which appears to have been the
older name for the god Freyr. Proto-Germanic
Ingwaz was the
legendary ancestor of the Ingaevones, or more
accurately Ingvaeones...
- the
first phoneme of the rune's
respective name, with the
exception of
Ingwaz and Algiz: the Proto-Germanic z
sound of the
Algiz rune
never occurred in...
-
Gothic letter enguz may
indicate the
existence among the
Goths of the god
Ingwaz, an
older name for the god Freyr, but
there is no
other evidence for that...
- the Ingaevones/Ingvaeones
derives his name from a
posited proto-Germanic *
Ingwaz, as Ing, Ingo or Inguio, son of Mannus. This is also the name
applied to...
- /l/ *laguz "water, lake" (or
possibly *laukaz "l****") ᛜ ŋ /ŋ/ *
ingwaz "the god
Ingwaz" ᛞ d /d/ *dagaz "day" ᛟ o /o(ː)/ *ōþila-/*ōþala- "heritage, estate...
- The Roches' 1992
album A Dove Ing, form of the
Germanic god name
Yngvi Ingwaz rune, also
known as Ing in Old English, a
runic symbol possibly referring...
- and thus
could not be
named acrophonically, the
other being the ŋ-rune
Ingwaz ᛜ. As the
terminal *-z
phoneme marks the
nominative singular suffix of masculine...
- with vowels:
Kragehul I The
syllable ing
written as a
ligature of Isaz and
Ingwaz (the so-called "lantern rune"). Bind
runes are not
common in Anglo-Saxon...
-
before 1903, as it was
believed this rune form
could be an
early form of the
Ingwaz rune. The
second word on the
horns was thus
interpreted as
holtingaz rather...
- Ⲭ
enguz *𐌹𐌲𐌲𐌿𐍃 (*iggus) or *𐌹𐌲𐌲𐍅𐍃 (*iggws) "the god Yngvi" *
ingwaz /k/ 600 𐍇 𐍈 ƕ (hw) Θ, Ⲯ(?)
uuaer *𐍈𐌰𐌹𐍂 (*hwair) "kettle" /hʷ/...