Talk:Scald Law

Latest comment: 2 months ago by Nagelfar

Wherein etymology is concerted in all likely effort, could one find likely second party sourcing from Old Norse for “skald” — a poet, songs singer / tale teller, as like a bard or in the anglo-saxon language, a scop; the closeness of the Scando-nordic northern Germanic impact over the western Old English grouping in the scots dialects evidenced in "wagon" over "wane" (yet kept in surnames: e.g. Wainwright - 'Wagons hath wrought by artifice of profession and smithery, #brow'n'nout, pound me beaten pot-tension-ateo, cart a foul fool full fuel? Few (w)ill, fuse isle? Lodge err(and/or) Nagelfar (talk) 02:08, 29 March 2024 (UTC)Reply