• @Frostbeard
    link
    91 month ago

    It’s Miklagard (old Norse name for the city)

    "Gard"means wall/fence and is incidentally where you get gorod in Russian/Slavic languages I think.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      125 days ago

      this confused me since “gård” absolutely does not have the meaning of fence/wall in modern swedish, and looking at wiktionary it seems in ancient norse it only slightly had that meaning, with other meanings being the more sensible to me “city”, “region”, and “yard”.

      • @Frostbeard
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        1
        edit-2
        25 days ago

        The word gard still also means fence in Norwegian. Still in use i the words “Skigard” (using the original meaning of the word ski as wood split lengthwise) and “steingard”.

        Also in the word “manngard” as a line of people moving forward when searching for something or someone.

        It also means the word gård.