Thanks for the explanation and the links.

If Zoega is less likely to sink my long ship, what makes the Cleasby
Dictionary more likely to sink my long ship? :-)


> One advantage to Zoega is that it distinguishes certain vowels --
> <æ> from <oe>, and <ø> from <ö> -- which later fell together.
>
> One very minor trouble is that it is sometimes a little
inconsistent
> in ordering letters. Usually, short vowels come before the
> corresponding long vowels, but I've occasionally met pages where no
> separation is made. Not a huge problem though.
>
> One boon: Zoega is less likely to sink your longship.
>
> Llama Nom
>
> PS. Some Norse dictionaries online:
>
> http://www.northvegr.org/zoega/index002.php?
> PHPSESSID=2bc83bc631bdf9aac06c4039ba979f8b
> http://www.ling.upenn.edu/~kurisuto/germanic/language_resources.html
> http://www.koeblergerhard.de/publikat.html
> http://www.dok.hf.uio.no/perl/search/search.cgi?appid=86&tabid=1275