Talk:Scald Law

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wherein etymology is concerted in all likely effort, could one find likely second party sourcing from Old Norse for “skald” — a poet, songs singer / tale teller, as like a bard or in the anglo-saxon language, a scop; the closeness of the Scando-nordic northern Germanic impact over the western Old English grouping in the scots dialects evidenced in "wagon" over "wane" (yet kept in surnames: e.g. Wainwright - 'Wagons hath wrought by artifice of profession and smithery, #brow'n'nout, pound me beaten pot-tension-ateo, cart a foul fool full fuel? Few (w)ill, fuse isle? Lodge err(and/or) Nagelfar (talk) 02:08, 29 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]