Finnas
Old English
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *finnōz. Cognate with Old Norse Finnar.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈfin.nɑs/
Proper noun
Finnas m pl
- the Sami
- Lapland
- plural of Finn
- Voyages of Ohthere and Wulfstan
- On þǣm mōrum eardiað Finnas; and þæt bȳne land is ēasteweard brādost, and symle swā norðor swā smælre. Ēastewerd hit mæġ bīon syxtiġ mīla brād, oþþe hwēne brǣdre; and middeweard þritiġ oððe brādre; and norðeweard, hē cwæð, þǣr hit smalost wǣre, þæt hit mihte bēon þrēora mīla brād tō þǣm mōre; and sē mōr syðþan, on sumum stōwum, swā brād swā man mæġ on twām wucum oferferan; and, on sumum stōwum, swā brād swā man mæġ on syx dagum oferferan.
- Finns dwell on the moors; and that inhabited land is widest in the east, and always smaller farther north. In the east it can be sixty miles wide, or a bit wider; and in the middle, thirty miles or broader; and in the north, he said, where it was smallest, it might be three miles across to the moor; and the moor, in some places, is as wide as a man can cross in two weeks; and in some places, as broad as a man can cross in six days.
- Voyages of Ohthere and Wulfstan
Declension
Strong a-stem:
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | — | Finnas |
| accusative | — | Finnas |
| genitive | — | Finna |
| dative | — | Finnum |
Derived terms
Descendants
- English: Fins