English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Norse Mjǫllnir, from Proto-Germanic *meldunjaz, from Proto-Indo-European *meldʰ-n- (“lightning”). Compare Old Norse mjuln (“fire”), Welsh mellt, Slovene mółnja, Russian мо́лния (mólnija).
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈmjɔlnɪɹ/
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈmjɒlnɪə/
Proper noun
Mjollnir
- (Norse mythology) The hammer of the Norse god Thor.
Spelling variations include use of either one L or two, use of either I or E as the second vowel, and use of any of the following as the first vowel: O, Ö, Ø.
Translations
Thor's hammer
- Arabic: مِيُولْنِير m (miyūlnīr)
- Armenian: Մյոլնիր (Myolnir)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 妙爾尼爾 / 妙尔尼尔 (Miào'ěrní'ěr)
- Danish: Mjølner c
- Esperanto: Mjolniro
- Faroese: Mjølnir m
- Finnish: Mjölner
- French: Mjolnir (fr) m, Mjollnir m
- Georgian: მიოლნირი (miolniri)
- German: Mjölnir m, Mjöllnir m
- Greek: Μγιόλνιρ n (Mgiólnir)
- Hebrew: מיולניר m
- Icelandic: Mjölnir (is) m
- Japanese: ミョルニル (Myoruniru)
- Kazakh: Мьёлльнир (Mellnir)
- Korean: 묠니르 (Myollireu)
- Latvian: Mjelnirs m
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: Mjølner m
- Nynorsk: Mjølne m, Mjølner m
- Old Norse: Mjǫllnir m
- Persian: میولنیر (miyolnir)
- Russian: Мьёльнир m (Mʹjólʹnir), Мьёллнир m (Mʹjóllnir)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: Мјолнир m
- Roman: Mjolnir m
- Swedish: Mjölner (sv) c
- Ukrainian: Мйо́льнір m (Mjólʹnir)
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German
Proper noun
Mjollnir m (proper noun, strong, genitive Mjollnirs)
- uncommon spelling of Mjölnir