Yes.
Eyjafjallajökull (Eyja - Fjalla - Jökull = Island - Mountain - Glacier)
Fjalla=Mountain Jökull=Glacier Eyjafjallajökull=Islandmountainglacier :D
Eyja- og Miklaholtshreppur's population is 135.
The area of Eyja- og Miklaholtshreppur is 383 square kilometers.
English: Island - Mountain - Glacier Icelandic: Eyja - Fjalla - Jökull
Island as in "that small island" you say eyja. If you are gona say land then we say land too :)
First, you buy the Skingrad house Rosethorn Hall in Oblivion. It costs a lot (consider multiplying objects to sell to build up the money) and you need a lot of Fame, so cover this stuff first. Second, buy all the furniture at the shop. Just follow the compass. You NEED to have the servant's quarters or Eyja won't move in. Third, find Eyja. This isn't hard- she's usually at Colovian Trader's. Pay 150 gold and she's yours.
you are thick there is only one servant in the game eyja who comes with the skingrad house you can also get followers by being the leader of the guilds or the arena grand champion also you can get the golden saints or the dark seducers to follow you in the shivering isles expansion
Eyjafjallajökull means ice cap of the Eyjafjöll.The name Eyjafjöll is made up of the words eyja (island), and the plural word fjöll (mountains) and together literally means: "the mountains of the islands".The word fjalla is the genitive plural of fjöll, and so Eyjafjalla is the genitive form of Eyjafjöll and means: "of the Eyjafjöll". A literal part-by-part translation of Eyjafjallajökull would thus be "Islands' Mountains' ice cap".
The North American and Eurasian plates, between which is the Mid-Atlantic ridge - the location of Eyja. On the Mid-Atlantic Ridge - as at all constructive plate boundaries - the two plates move apart from each other. As they separate magma easily escapes to fill the gap, either as a relatively gentle eruption or a lava flow.
Often to understand names of places and things, we need to consider the native language, meaning the language in that country or area.Eyjafjallajökull (also called E15) is the Icelandic name for "Island mountain glacier". Eyjafjallajökull is actually one of the smaller ice caps that covers the cauldron-like volcanic top. The Middle English word ikel, like -icle of English icicle, is combined with the word jökull, meaning glacier or ice cap. Eyjafjöll is made up of two words: eyja (genitive plural of ey, meaning eyot or island), and the plural word fjöll, meaning fells or mountains). Both together literally means: "the mountains of the islands". The word fjalla is the genitive plural of fjöll; the word Eyjafjalla is the genitive form of Eyjafjöll and means: "of the Eyjafjöll". So going piece by piece, the name Eyjafjallajökull means "Islands' Mountains' ice cap".It's an easy name for an Icelander to say!