karl
English
Etymology
Learned borrowing from Old Norse karl. Doublet of carl, ceorl, and churl.
Noun
karl (plural karls)
- (historical) A medieval Scandinavian freeman.
- a. 1936, Ian B[ernard] Stoughton Holbourn, “Udal Property and the Kings of Foula”, in The Isle of Foula: A Series of Articles on Britain’s Loneliest Inhabited Isle, Edinburgh: Birlinn, published 2001, →ISBN, page 76:
- Whatever its object the runrig system was not udal tenure, and therefore it appears to me to show a settlement of the unfree. Whether these were the karls or the thralls is the only problem, and I incline to think that there is little room for doubt that these were the karls. The thrall may have had a scrap of ground and kept pigs, but there is no evidence that he had agricultural land. In short the modern cottar is the descendent of the thrall and the crofter of the karl.
- 1993, Philippa Wingate, Anne Millard, “Viking society and government”, in The Viking World (Usborne Illustrated World History), Tulsa, Okla.: EDC Publishing, published 1994, page 20, column 2:
- The largest group in Viking society were the karls, who were free men and women. Many karls owned their own farmsteads; others rented land from rich landowners.
- 2016, Louise Spilsbury, “Powerful Kings and Suffering Slaves”, in The Vikings: Dig Up the Secrets of the Dead (History Hunters), Oxford, Oxfordshire: Raintree, →ISBN, page 18:
- There were three kinds of Viking: thralls, karls and jarls. Thralls were the slaves. They were owned by karls and jarls. They did most of the hard work and the worst, dirtiest jobs. The karls were ordinary folk like farmers, craftsmen, blacksmiths and hunters.
See also
Danish
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse karl (“man”), from Proto-Norse ᚲᚨᚱᛁᛚᚨᛉ (karilaʀ), from Proto-Germanic *karilaz, cognate with English churl, German Kerl, Dutch kerel.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kaːˀl/, [ˈkʰæˀl]
Noun
karl c (singular definite karlen, plural indefinite karle)
- farmhand (a man working at a farm)
- groom, ostler (a man looking after horses)
- (informal) bloke, chap, guy
Declension
common gender |
singular | plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | karl | karlen | karle | karlene |
genitive | karls | karlens | karles | karlenes |
Icelandic
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse karl, from Proto-Norse ᚲᚨᚱᛁᛚᚨᛉ (karilaʀ), from Proto-Germanic *karilaz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kʰa(r)tl/
- (Northern Iceland, Southern Iceland) IPA(key): [kʰɐ(r)tɬ], [kʰɐ(ɾ)tɬ]
- Rhymes: -artl, -atl
- (Reykjavik) IPA(key): [kʰɐɾtɬ]
Audio: (file)
- (Reykjavik) IPA(key): [kʰɐtːɬ]
Audio: (file)
Noun
karl m (genitive singular karls, nominative plural karlar)
- man (male human)
- husband
- Synonyms: eiginmaður m, maður m
- male (of a species)
- Synonym: karldýr n
- (video games) a character (in a video game, or in an RPG)
- Synonyms: persóna f, tölvuleikapersóna f
- (chess) chess piece, chessman
Declension
singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | karl | karlinn | karlar | karlarnir |
accusative | karl | karlinn | karla | karlana |
dative | karli | karlinum | körlum | körlunum |
genitive | karls | karlsins | karla | karlanna |
Derived terms
- karlakór
- karlaveldi
- karldýr
- karlfauskur
- karlkyn
- karlleggur
- karlmaður
- karlmannlegur
- karlmenni
- karlmennska
- karlremba
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
Inherited from Old Norse karl.
Noun
karl m
- alternative spelling of kall
References
- “karl” in Ivar Aasen (1873) Norsk Ordbog med dansk Forklaring
Old Norse
Alternative forms
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Norse ᚲᚨᚱᛁᛚᚨᛉ (karilaʀ), from Proto-Germanic *karilaz. Compare Old English ċeorl, ċiorl, Old High German karal, karl.
Noun
karl m
- man
- freeman; one belonging to the social class between slaves and nobles
- c. 900, Vitgeirr the sorcerer, loose stanza
- Þat’s vǫ́ lítil, · at vér síðim
karla bǫrn · ok kerlinga,
es Rǫgnvaldr síðr · réttilbeini
hróðmǫgr Haralds · á Haðalandi.- It's little harm that we should practice sorcery,
the children of peasants and their wives,
when Rainwald ‘straight-leg’ practices sorcery,
Harold’s famous son, in Hadeland.
- It's little harm that we should practice sorcery,
- c. 900, Vitgeirr the sorcerer, loose stanza
Declension
masculine | singular | plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | karl | karlinn | karlar | karlarnir |
accusative | karl | karlinn | karla | karlana |
dative | karli | karlinum | kǫrlum | kǫrlunum |
genitive | karls | karlsins | karla | karlanna |
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
- akrgerðikarl m (“ploughman, reaper”)
- arftǫkukarl m (“one taken as someone who has made another his heir”)
- augnakarl m (“pan of the hip-joint”)
- barnakarl m (“a children's friend”)
- bragðakarl m (“sly fellow”)
- búandkarl m (“farmer”)
- búkarl m (“farmer”)
- ellikarl m (“old man”)
- ferjukarl m (“ferryman”)
- fretkarl m (“contemptible fellow”)
- heljarkarl m (“one doomed to die, accursed”)
- hærukarl m (“hoary (old) man”)
- hórkarl m (“adulterer”)
- húskarl m (“housecarl”)
- karlafolk n (“male folk”)
- karlafǫt n pl (“men's attire”)
- karlasæti n (“seat for men”)
- karldyrr f pl (“the men's door”)
- karlefni n (“a promising lad”)
- karlfjǫldi m (“multitude of men”)
- karlfǫt n pl
- karlgildr (“as good as a man”)
- karlhǫfuð n (“a man's head (carved)”)
- karlhǫfði m (“a carved man's head, figurehead”)
- karlkenndr (“masculine”)
- karlklæði n (“men's clothes”)
- karlkostr m (“a (good) match”)
- karlkyn n (“the male sex”)
- karlleggr m (“agnates”)
- karlmaðr m (“man”)
- karlmennska f (“manhood, valour”)
- karlsift (“on the male side”)
- karlsvipt f (“relationship by descent on the male side”)
- kerling f
- kolakarl m (“charcoal-maker”)
- kotkarl m (“cottager”)
- okrkarl m (“usurer”)
- plógkarl m (“ploughman”)
- saltkarl m (“salt-burner”)
- skrafkarl m (“chatterbox”)
- skrattakarl m (“vile wizard”)
- skítkarl m (“dirty fellow”)
- stafkarl m (“poor beggar”)
- sækarl m (“sea-carl”)
- trollkarl m (“male troll”)
- vagnkarl m (“wagoner”)
- varðkarl m (“warder”)
- vatnkarl m (“jug”)
- villukarl m (“heretic”)
- vitakarl m (“beacon watchman”)
- þorpkarl m (“churl”)
Descendants
- Icelandic: karl
- Faroese: kallur
- Norwegian: kall, kar
- Jamtish: kall, karr (< *karaz)
- Elfdalian: kall
- Old Swedish: karilʀ[1][2]
- Swedish: karl
- Danish: karl, kal
- Norwegian Bokmål: kall
- ⇒ Old Norse: Karl (given name)[3]
- Icelandic: Karl, Carl
- Faroese: Karl
- Norwegian: Karl, Carl
- Old Swedish: Karl
- Old Danish: Karl
- ⇒ Old Norse: Karli, Karle, Kalli (diminutive)
- → English: Karl, Carl
- → Finnish: Karl
- → Sami: Kárral
- → English: karl (learned)
- → Middle English: carl
References
- ^ The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. Volume II. 237th page.
- ^ Antiqvarisk Tidskrift för Sverige. Tionde Delen. 1887-1891. 305th page.
- ^ Pfaff, Judith (2018). Nordic Names. Web.
Further reading
- Zoëga, Geir T. (1910) “karl”, in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press; also available at the Internet Archive
Swedish
Etymology
Inherited from Old Swedish karilʀ, from Old Norse karl, from Proto-Norse ᚲᚨᚱᛁᛚᚨᛉ (karilaʀ), from Proto-Germanic *karilaz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɑːr/
Audio: (file) - Homophone: kar
Noun
karl c
- man (male human)
- Synonym: man
- Bra karl reder sig själv
- A good man manages on his own (proverb)
- 1932, Evert Taube, “Calle Schewens vals [Calle Schewen's Waltz]”[1]:
- Då vilar min blommande ö vid din barm, du dunkelblå, vindstilla fjärd. Och julinattsskymningen smyger sig varm till sovande buskar och träd. Min älva, du dansar så lyssnande tyst och tänker att karlar är troll. Den skälver, din barnsliga hand som jag kysst, och valsen förklingar i moll.
- Then my blossoming island rests [then rests my blossoming island] on your bosom, you dark blue, still ["windstill," currently windless] archipelago / bay. And the dusk of the July night sneaks, warm, to sleeping bushes and trees. My fairy [or "elf," but with different connotations], you dance so quietly, listening ["listeningly quiet"], and think to yourself [to avoid the ambiguity of just "think" here in English] that men are trolls. It trembles, your childish hand that I have kissed, and the waltz fades away in minor [key].
- 1970, “Sjörövar-Fabbe [Pirate Fabbe (pet form of Fabian)]”, Astrid Lindgren (lyrics), Georg Riedel (music)[2]:
- Sjörövar-Fabbe, farfars far, är minsann en sjusärdeles karl. Kring alla hav han far och far. Tjohej hadelittan lej.
- Pirate Fabbe, my great-grandfather, is for sure a tremendous man [like "one hell of a man," except old-fashioned and not vulgar]. Around all the seas he sails [goes/travels] and sails. Tjohej hadelittan lej [nonsense phrase].
- 1972, Ted Gärdestad, “Jag vill ha en egen måne [I want a moon of my own]”[3]:
- Du har då aldrig trott på tårar. Det passar inte för en karl. Om man är över femton vårar, finns inga känslor kvar.
- You have never believed in tears [The "då" roughly works as an emphasizer: "Well, you have ..."]. It doesn't suit a man. If you are over fifteen years old [over fifteen springs], there are no feelings left.
- husband
- (male) member of a work force, employed to perform some particularly heavy or physically demanding job
Usage notes
Has connotations of being manly, and is as such somewhat frowned upon by certain feminists; but it also may have connotations of being able to perform a certain task. Compare the formulaic expression karl för sin ... (with some attribute), which denotes someone who is up to par with his role, and is able to perform at least by some minimal standards on his own. Here the role is usually something associated with the given attribute, though karl för sin hatt is associated with a more generic male role.
Declension
nominative | genitive | ||
---|---|---|---|
singular | indefinite | karl | karls |
definite | karlen | karlens | |
plural | indefinite | karlar | karlars |
definite | karlarna | karlarnas |
Derived terms
See also
- manlig (“manly”)
References
- karl in Svensk ordbok (SO)
- karl in Svenska Akademiens ordlista (SAOL)
- karl in Svenska Akademiens ordbok (SAOB)