- Týr (/tɪər/; Old Norse: Týr,
pronounced [tyːr]) is a god in
Germanic mythology and
member of the Æsir. In
Norse mythology,
which provides most of the surviving...
- m****-produced
version of the
Teiwaz Frame.
While developed from scratch, it
retains many
features from the
Teiwaz Frame. Consequentially,
Teiwaz mechanics are instantly...
-
identified with this god. The
reconstructed Proto-Germanic name is *Tîwaz or *
Teiwaz.
Tiwaz rune was an
ideographic symbol for a spear.[citation needed] Tiwaz...
- from Gr**** Tau, and is the
ancestor of
modern Latin T ᛏ :
Runic letter teiwaz,
which probably derives from old
Italic T ፐ : One of the 26 consonantal...
- sunshine,
among other things Sól,
goddess and
personification of the sun
Teiwaz, as a
reflex of *Dyeus, was
probably originally god of the day-lit sky Thor...
-
reads the
inscription as Hariχasti teiva, 'Harigast the priest' (from *
teiwaz 'god'), as
another inscribed helmet also
found at the site
bears several...
- This
eliminates the
remaining /ei/,
changing it to /iː/ — *deywós 'god' > *
teiwaz- (attested as *teiva- in the
Negau helmet) > *Tīwaz 'Týr'; *tréyes 'three'...
-
interpreted by some
scholars as
Harigasti Teiwǣ (*harja-gastiz 'army-guest' + *
teiwaz 'god, deity'),
which could be an
invocation to a war-god or a mark of ownership...
- Isaribi,
having brought along the
Teiwaz transport crew, the Turbines.
Refusing his order,
Tekkadan battles Teiwaz in
Mobile Suit combat, but unbeknownst...
- research?] This
concerns primarily the
runes used magically,
especially the
Teiwaz and
Ansuz runes which are
taken to
symbolize or
invoke deities in sequences...