The word "careen" has Germanic origins, derived from the Old Provençal word "carinar" meaning "to keel over." It entered the English language in the early 19th century.
The word "innovate" has Latin origins, deriving from the Latin word "innovare" which means "to renew or change."
Fearful
secret or mystery =]
The Norse word for farmer is "bóndi."
The word "loon" likely comes from Old Norse or Old English origins, and it may be related to words meaning "lame" or "clumsy" due to the bird's awkward appearance on land.
The word "innovate" has Latin origins, deriving from the Latin word "innovare" which means "to renew or change."
The word has Proto-Germanic origins.
Hubert is an Ancient Germanic name that could have been used by people of the Norse culture because the Germanic tribes included the Danes and the Swedes. Hubert was the patron saint of hunters.
Neither. It is Old English, of Germanic origins.
After taking too much of alcohol I started to careen. :)
The word 'hunger' comes from old Dutch and Germanic origins and has no Greek meaning.
The Algiz rune represented protection in Germanic, Anglo-Saxon, and Norse groups. It is also known to mean 'yew' or 'elk'. It sometimes the rune of the Valkyrie. The Old Norse word for 'protecter' is véurr.
The term "word" in Old English may descend from any of several roots: the Germanic wort, the Gothic waurd, the Norse orth, or Latin verbum. The original root may be the Indo-European wer or the Proto-Germanic wurdan.
The letter 'K' begins the word 'knife' because the word's uncertain origins in the Proto-Germanic word *knibaz were honored by the Ancient Norsemen when they brought the word into their language (Old Norse) as knifr, which was then brought into the Late Old English as the word cnif. Thence to modern English as we know it today.
From an old Norse word 'raptr' which later in Europe became 'rafter' meaning a floating platform, related to a Germanic word 'rachter'.
From the Old Norse influence meaning Thors day. Most Germanic languages name the day after Thonor and Thor, god of thunder
The origin of the word "wrong" is Old Norse which is a North Germanic language spoken by those in Scandinavia and those of viking settlements until the early 14th century.