Ná-bjargir

Dizionario Old Norse - ná-bjargir

Significato della parola Old Norse "ná-bjargir"

Come definito dal dizionario Old Norse to English di Cleasby & Vigfusson:

ná-bjargir
f. pl. ‘lyke-help,’ see nár; in the phrase, veita e-m nábjargir, to lend one ‘lyke-help,’ i. e. to close the eyes, mouth, and nostrils of a person immediately after death; hví hefir þú eigi veitt honum nábjargir er opnar eru nasirnar, why hast thou not lent him the ‘lyke-help,’ for the nostrils are open? Nj. 154; hann bað hvern varask at ganga framan at honum meðan honum vóru eigi nábjargir veittar, Eb. 70; hann lagði hann niðr í setið ok veitti honum þá nábjargir, Eg. 398, Bret. 32; cp. the Gr. ἰδων δε ὑ Κρίτων ξυνέλαβε το στόμα τε και τους ὀφθαλμούς (but not the nostrils as in the Northern rite), Plato’s Phaedo (sub fine); whereas with the Norsemen the closing the nostrils was indispensable, whence the phrase, lúka nösum, to have the nostrils shut = to die, see nös (nasar).

Possibile iscrizione runica in Fuþark recente:ᚾᛅ-ᛒᛁᛅᚱᚴᛁᚱ
Le rune Fuþark recenti sono state utilizzate dal 8° al 12° secolo in Scandinavia e nei loro insediamenti all'estero

Abbreviazioni usate:

cp.
compare.
f.
feminine.
Gr.
Greek.
i. e.
id est.
l.
line.
pl.
plural.

Opere & Autori citati:

Bret.
Breta Sögur. (G. I.)
Eb.
Eyrbyggja Saga. (D. II.)
Eg.
Egils Saga. (D. II.)
Nj.
Njála. (D. II.)
➞ Vedi tutte le opere citate nel dizionario

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