

berr-serkr, 'bare-shirt') frenzied warriors billow bylgja birth byrðr bleak bleikr (="pale") blunder blundra (="shut one's eye") both baðir bug búkr (="insect within tree trunks") bulk bulki bull boli bylaw bylög ('by'=village 'lög'=law 'village-law') C cake kaka (="cake") call kalla (="cry loudly") cast kasta (="to throw") clip klippa (="to cut") club klubba (="cudgel") crawl krafla (="to claw") creek kriki ("corner, nook") through ME creke ("narrow inlet in a coastline") altered from kryk perhaps influenced by Anglo-Norman crique itself from a Scandinavian source via Norman-French crook krokr (="hook-shaped instrument or weapon") cur kurra (="to growl") D die deyja (="pass away") dirt drit (="feces") dregs dregg (="sediment") E egg egg (="egg") eider a type of duck. of baða "bathe" (baðast, baða sig) berserk berserkr, lit. English provenance = c 1205 AD (as aȝe, an early form of the word resulting from the influence of Old Norse on an existing Anglo-Saxon form, eȝe)Īwkward the first element is from Old Norse ǫfugr ("=turned-backward"), the '-ward' part is from Old English weard B bag baggi bairn barn (="child") bait beita band band (="rope") bark bǫrkr bask baðask reflex.angr ("=trouble, affliction") root ang (="strait, straitened, troubled") Īre merger of Old English ( earun, earon) and Old Norse ( er) cognates auk A type of Arctic seabird.á ("=in, on, to") + lopt ("=air, atmosphere, sky, heaven, upper floor, loft").A ado influenced by Norse "at" ("to", infinitive marker) which was used with English "do" in certain English dialects aloft
