- mythology,
Skinfaxi (Old Norse: [ˈskinˌfɑkse]) and Hrímfaxi [ˈhriːmˌfɑkse] are the
horses of Dagr (day) and Nótt (night). The
names Skinfaxi and Hrímfaxi...
- son of the god
Dellingr and is ****ociated with the bright-maned
horse Skinfaxi, who "draw[s] day to mankind".
Depending on m****cript variation, the Prose...
-
Retrieved 6 May 2018. Metnaðarfull dagskrá og góð þáttaka víða um land.
Skinfaxi (in Icelandic), p. 23. Noriega,
Christina (August 6, 2024). "Colombia goes...
- them are: Skólablaðið
Skinfaxi -
Articles about the past year;
published annually.
Contains two publications, Skólablaðið and
Skinfaxi, respectably, which...
- Hófvarpnir Hófvarpnir,
horse of the
goddess Gná Hrímfaxi, Nótt's
horse Skinfaxi, Dagr's
horse Sleipnir, Odin's eight-legged
horse Svaðilfari, the stallion...
-
English dramatist and poet
James Shirley's play The
Triumph of
Peace (1663).
Skinfaxi and Hrímfaxi, the
horses that pull Day and
Night in
Norse mythology Alcis...
- of
uniforms of
clerks and
workmen respectively c.
early 20th century.
Skinfaxi and Hrímfaxi (meaning shining-mane and rime-mane; two
horses in
Norse mythology)...
-
refers to it as one of the
horses of the Day (likely Dagr),
along with
Skinfaxi. The Old
Norse word Glaðr
translates to
English as "glad one", "shining...
-
stallions that pull Day and
Night across the sky. Odin
correctly answers that
Skinfaxi pulls Day
across the
world and
Hrimfaxi draws the Night. Odin also offers...
- alsvartr, apli, askr, malfeti, Blóðhófr, Hamskarpr, brúnn, Hófvarpnir, viggr,
Skinfaxi, virfill, Hrímfaxi.
Brown one, horse,
fettered one, Móðnir, gelding, all-black...