vitki
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Norse vitki.
Noun
vitki (plural vitkis or vitkar)
Icelandic
Etymology
From Old Norse vitki (“only used of a sorcerer; a wise man”). Derived from the definite form of Old Norse vitugr (“clever, having wit”), from Old Norse vitr (“wise”); or derived from Old Norse vittugr (“having magical powers”).
Noun
vitki m (genitive singular vitka, nominative plural vitkar)
- (poetic) sorcerer
- Synonyms: galdramaður, töframaður
Declension
| singular | plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
| nominative | vitki | vitkinn | vitkar | vitkarnir |
| accusative | vitka | vitkann | vitka | vitkana |
| dative | vitka | vitkanum | vitkum | vitkunum |
| genitive | vitka | vitkans | vitka | vitkanna |
Related terms
- vitka
- vitkun
Serbo-Croatian
Adjective
vitki (Cyrillic spelling витки)
- inflection of vitak:
- masculine nominative/vocative plural
- definite masculine nominative/vocative singular
- definite inanimate masculine accusative singular