víkingr

Old Norse

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *wīkingaz. Cognate with Old English wīċing and Old Frisian wītsing.

May be equivalent to Vík + -ingr, or the more general vík (bay, inlet) + -ingr. Others proposals were made, like e.g. deriving víkingr from the root related to the verb víkja (or its Proto-Germanic equivalent). [1]

Pronunciation

  • (9th century West Norse) IPA(key): /ˈwiːkinɡɹ̝/, [ˈwiː.cɪ̃ŋɡ̊ɹ̻̊˔]
  • (12th century Icelandic) IPA(key): /ˈwiːkinɡr/

Noun

víkingr m (genitive víkings, plural víkingar)

  1. pirate, Viking

Usage notes

  • Unlike in modern English, this term only refers to naval pirates and raiders, not to all Scandinavians of the time.

Declension

Descendants

All descendants are learned borrowings.

  • Icelandic: víkingur
  • Faroese: víkingur
  • Norwegian Nynorsk: viking
  • Swedish: viking
  • Danish: viking
  • English: Viking
  • German: Wikinger

References

  1. Eldar Heide (2005) Viking — ‘rower shifting'?
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