jǫtunn
Old Norse
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *etunaz (“giant”). Cognate with Old English eoten.
Pronunciation
Noun
jǫtunn m (genitive jǫtuns, plural jǫtnar)
Declension
| masculine | singular | plural | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
| nominative | jǫtunn | jǫtunninn | jǫtnar | jǫtnarnir |
| accusative | jǫtun | jǫtuninn | jǫtna | jǫtnana |
| dative | jǫtni | jǫtninum | jǫtnum | jǫtnunum |
| genitive | jǫtuns | jǫtunsins | jǫtna | jǫtnanna |
Derived terms
- jǫtunbygðr (“peopled by ettins”)
- Jǫtunheimr (“Jotunheim”)
- jǫtunmóðr (“ettins's fury”)
- jǫtunuxi (“a kind of a beetle”, literally “ettin-ox”)
Descendants
- Icelandic: jötunn m
- Faroese: jøtun m
- Norwegian Nynorsk: jotun, jøtul m
- Norwegian Bokmål: jotun, jutul m
- Old Danish: iætæn m
- Danish: jætte c
- Old Swedish: iætun, iætti m
- Swedish: jätte c or m
- → English: jotun (learned)
Further reading
- Richard Cleasby, Guðbrandur Vigfússon (1874) “jǫtunn”, in An Icelandic-English Dictionary, 1st edition, Oxford: Oxford Clarendon Press, page 328
- Zoëga, Geir T. (1910) “jötunn”, in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press, page 234; also available at the Internet Archive