dark elf

English

Etymology

Back-formation from dark elves, a calque of Old Norse dǫkkalfar.

Pronunciation

  • Audio (US):(file)

Noun

dark elf (plural dark elves)

  1. (Norse mythology) A member of the race of Dǫkkálfar or Dark Alfs, creatures who live underground.
    • 2017, Neil Gaiman, Norse Mythology, Bloomsbury Publishing, page 20:
      Nidavellir, which is sometimes called Svartalfheim, where the dwarfs (who are also known as dark elves) live beneath the mountains and build their remarkable creations.
  2. (fantasy) A member of a race of elves that is evil, has a dark (often greyish or bluish) skin and/or lives in dark places.

Usage notes

Some scholars think that in Old Norse the term for dark elves was a kenning for "dwarves".

Translations

See also

References

  • Bulfinch, Thomas (1834; republished in 1970 by Harper & Row) Bulfinch's Mythology, →ISBN, page 348
  • Mythology of All Races, volume 2: Eddic, Marshall Jones Company, 1930, pages 220–221

Anagrams