Jǫrmungandr
Old Norse
Etymology
From jǫrmun (“whole; great”) + gandr (“stick, staff; magic, monster”), from Proto-Germanic *ermunaz + *gandaz.
Proper noun
Jǫrmungandr m
- (Norse mythology) The World Serpent or Midgard Serpent, an offspring of Loki, which is thrown into the ocean by Odin but grows to encircle the world, and is finally slain during Ragnarok by Thor, who then succumbs to its poisonous breath.
- 2006, Ruth Binney, Nature's Ways: Lore, Legend, Fact and Fiction, page 234:
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- The ultimate symbol of evil, the Midgard Serpent or Jörmungandr, was the offspring of the trickster Loki and the sorceress Angur-boda, who also gave birth to Hel (the queen of the dead) and the Fenris Wolf (see page 239).
- 2010, Valerie Estelle Frankel, From Girl to Goddess: The Heroine's Journey through Myth and Legend, page 70:
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- Thus the Aegypto-Greek Ourobouros or Norse Jörmungandr (Midgard serpent) surrounds the cosmos, biting its own tail in a symbol of perpetuity and infinity, never ending, always regenerating.
Synonyms
- (mythological serpent): Miðgarðsormr, Midgardsormr, Midgard Serpent, World Serpent,
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