tjern
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From Old Norse tjarn n, tjǫrn f (“small lake, pond, tarn; pool”), from Proto-Germanic *ternō (“a mountain lake without tributaries; watering hole; small pool”), from Proto-Indo-European *der- (“to split, to separate; to tear, to crack, to shatter”).
Cognate with Danish tjern, Swedish tjärn, Icelandic tjörn, Faroese tjørn and English tarn.
Pronunciation
Noun
tjern n (definite singular tjernet, indefinite plural tjern, definite plural tjerna or tjernene)
tjern f or m (definite singular tjerna or tjernen, indefinite plural tjerner, definite plural tjernene)
- a small lake, typically in a forest or mountain area.
See also
References
Norwegian Nynorsk
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Old Norse tjarn n, tjǫrn f (“a small mountain lake without tributaries”), from Proto-Germanic *ternō. Cognates with English tarn.
Noun
tjern n (definite singular tjernet, indefinite plural tjern, definite plural tjerna)
- a small lake, typically in a forest or mountain area.
See also
References
- “tjern” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.