- ISBN 978-3-89586-513-8, pp. 4, 50. "Scots
developed out of a
mixture of
Scandinavianised Northern English during the
early Middle English period....
Scots originated...
-
English translation, 'ford'. Alternatively, the
first element may be a
Scandinavianised form of
original Old
English 'gewæd', with the same meaning, or else...
- of the Uí Ímair
kindred which dominated much of the Norse-Gael and
Scandinavianised parts of
Britain and
Ireland in the 10th century.
Gofraid became ruler...
- king of
Dublin of the Uí Ímair
kindred which ruled over much of the
Scandinavianised and Norse-Gael
parts of
Great Britain and
Ireland in the
tenth century...
- Old
Norse and Old
English of "narrow-valley farm/settlement' or a
Scandinavianised form of cilda-tun, 'children's farm/settlement." The
village is to...
- or
fortification by a grove, trench,
canal or wood". The name was
Scandinavianised to Greasby,
under the
influence of Old
Norse speakers in
Wirral (gräf...
-
although his
position may have been more like that of a hold in more
Scandinavianised districts of England,
somewhere between that of a
thegn and an ealdorman...
- Nevertheless,
there is also a
possibility that Óspakr's name is a
Scandinavianised form of the
Gaelic Gilla Esbuig.
Although the patronym—"Husbac filium...