Mo og Frøland

The etymology of the Old Norse noun mór m. 'sandy plain etc.' has not as yet been satisfactorily clarified. This is primarily due to its formally ambiguous structure, so that the correct Proto Scandinavian form has so far remained unknown to us. This noun is, however, well attested in farm...

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Main Author: Bjorvand, Harald
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Norsk namnelag 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/1774
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spelling ftnovusforlagojs:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/1774 2023-05-15T17:13:00+02:00 Mo og Frøland Bjorvand, Harald 2019-12-31 application/pdf http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/1774 unknown Norsk namnelag http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/1774/1758 http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/1774 Opphavsrett 2019 Harald Bjorvand https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 CC-BY-SA NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol. 36 (2019) NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol 36 (2019) 2703-7371 0800-4684 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Fagfellevurdert artikkel 2019 ftnovusforlagojs 2022-04-29T11:27:03Z The etymology of the Old Norse noun mór m. 'sandy plain etc.' has not as yet been satisfactorily clarified. This is primarily due to its formally ambiguous structure, so that the correct Proto Scandinavian form has so far remained unknown to us. This noun is, however, well attested in farm names in both Norway and Sweden in forms like Mo or Moen, and two old Norwegian farm names Mo, which to-day are reflected in the modern town names Mo i Rana and Mosjøen, were borrowed from Proto-Scandi navian into South-Saami some time between 500 and 650. Consequently, Mo i Rana bears the South-Saami name Måehvie, which in all probability represents a (late) PrScand. acc. pl. *mÅhwã or *mohwã. The preferable form *mÅhwã is also ambiguous, but taken to re-flect a somewhat older form *mÅ«hwã (with *Å« > *Å before *h), it may be interpreted as etymologically related to e.g. ON múgi m. 'heap of hey, crowd of people' and Old English mÅ«ha, mÅ«ga and mÅ«wa m. 'heap of corn, mow'. Consequently, the Proto-Germanic forms seem to have been 1) *mÅ«Ìhwa(n)- (with stressed root syllable) in ON mór and OE mÅ«ha; and 2) *mÅ«gwá(n)- (with stressed suffix) in ON múgi and OE mÅ«ga, mÅ«wa. The original meaning was '(large) heap of different masses, e.g. sand, hey, corn, dung etc.' → 'sandy plain' in ON mór. The reconstructed proto-forms can, however, not be analyzed any further. The Norwegian farm name Frøland/Frøyland occurs in many parts of the country. It is obviously a compound, which in Old Norse is frequently attested in dat. pl. FreylÇ«ndum. The second ele-ment is ON land n. 'land, landed property, territory', probably ori-ginally in the plural, i.e. lÇ«nd n. pl. or landar, landir f. pl. The first Namn og nemne 2019 5.qxp_Layout 1 12.12.2019 12:29 Side 31 element ON Frøy was interpreted by Oluf Rygh as being the god name ON Freyr m. or possibly the goddess name ON Freyja f. Adolf Noreen, unwilling to accept this interpretation, assumed that Frøy-instead belonged to an unattested Old Norse adjective *freyr 'fertile', the only attestation of which was claimed to be the rare Norwegian dialect form frøy 'fertile'. This view was also shared by e.g. Magnus Olsen. It is shown, however, in this article that these names can only be seen as having the god name Freyr or perhaps the goddess name Freyja as their first element. The as-sumed adjective ON *freyr 'fertile' is shown to be an unacceptable form, and the dialect form frøy is most probably a relatively young variant of ON frjór 'fertile'. Article in Journal/Newspaper Mo i Rana Mosjøen saami Novus - Online tidsskrifter (Novus forlag) Mo i Rana ENVELOPE(14.133,14.133,66.310,66.310) Moen ENVELOPE(14.664,14.664,66.828,66.828) Mór ENVELOPE(-19.183,-19.183,66.050,66.050) Mosjøen ENVELOPE(13.463,13.463,64.826,64.826) Norway Oluf ENVELOPE(-60.167,-60.167,-63.700,-63.700)
institution Open Polar
collection Novus - Online tidsskrifter (Novus forlag)
op_collection_id ftnovusforlagojs
language unknown
description The etymology of the Old Norse noun mór m. 'sandy plain etc.' has not as yet been satisfactorily clarified. This is primarily due to its formally ambiguous structure, so that the correct Proto Scandinavian form has so far remained unknown to us. This noun is, however, well attested in farm names in both Norway and Sweden in forms like Mo or Moen, and two old Norwegian farm names Mo, which to-day are reflected in the modern town names Mo i Rana and Mosjøen, were borrowed from Proto-Scandi navian into South-Saami some time between 500 and 650. Consequently, Mo i Rana bears the South-Saami name Måehvie, which in all probability represents a (late) PrScand. acc. pl. *mÅhwã or *mohwã. The preferable form *mÅhwã is also ambiguous, but taken to re-flect a somewhat older form *mÅ«hwã (with *Å« > *Å before *h), it may be interpreted as etymologically related to e.g. ON múgi m. 'heap of hey, crowd of people' and Old English mÅ«ha, mÅ«ga and mÅ«wa m. 'heap of corn, mow'. Consequently, the Proto-Germanic forms seem to have been 1) *mÅ«Ìhwa(n)- (with stressed root syllable) in ON mór and OE mÅ«ha; and 2) *mÅ«gwá(n)- (with stressed suffix) in ON múgi and OE mÅ«ga, mÅ«wa. The original meaning was '(large) heap of different masses, e.g. sand, hey, corn, dung etc.' → 'sandy plain' in ON mór. The reconstructed proto-forms can, however, not be analyzed any further. The Norwegian farm name Frøland/Frøyland occurs in many parts of the country. It is obviously a compound, which in Old Norse is frequently attested in dat. pl. FreylÇ«ndum. The second ele-ment is ON land n. 'land, landed property, territory', probably ori-ginally in the plural, i.e. lÇ«nd n. pl. or landar, landir f. pl. The first Namn og nemne 2019 5.qxp_Layout 1 12.12.2019 12:29 Side 31 element ON Frøy was interpreted by Oluf Rygh as being the god name ON Freyr m. or possibly the goddess name ON Freyja f. Adolf Noreen, unwilling to accept this interpretation, assumed that Frøy-instead belonged to an unattested Old Norse adjective *freyr 'fertile', the only attestation of which was claimed to be the rare Norwegian dialect form frøy 'fertile'. This view was also shared by e.g. Magnus Olsen. It is shown, however, in this article that these names can only be seen as having the god name Freyr or perhaps the goddess name Freyja as their first element. The as-sumed adjective ON *freyr 'fertile' is shown to be an unacceptable form, and the dialect form frøy is most probably a relatively young variant of ON frjór 'fertile'.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bjorvand, Harald
spellingShingle Bjorvand, Harald
Mo og Frøland
author_facet Bjorvand, Harald
author_sort Bjorvand, Harald
title Mo og Frøland
title_short Mo og Frøland
title_full Mo og Frøland
title_fullStr Mo og Frøland
title_full_unstemmed Mo og Frøland
title_sort mo og frøland
publisher Norsk namnelag
publishDate 2019
url http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/1774
long_lat ENVELOPE(14.133,14.133,66.310,66.310)
ENVELOPE(14.664,14.664,66.828,66.828)
ENVELOPE(-19.183,-19.183,66.050,66.050)
ENVELOPE(13.463,13.463,64.826,64.826)
ENVELOPE(-60.167,-60.167,-63.700,-63.700)
geographic Mo i Rana
Moen
Mór
Mosjøen
Norway
Oluf
geographic_facet Mo i Rana
Moen
Mór
Mosjøen
Norway
Oluf
genre Mo i Rana
Mosjøen
saami
genre_facet Mo i Rana
Mosjøen
saami
op_source NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol. 36 (2019)
NAMN OG NEMNE; Vol 36 (2019)
2703-7371
0800-4684
op_relation http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/1774/1758
http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/NON/article/view/1774
op_rights Opphavsrett 2019 Harald Bjorvand
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-SA
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