Sæl Patricia!

Looks like you were in a bit of a rush there, check 'færðr' again.

Kveðja,
Haukur


> Saell Haukur
> That looks interesting - may I join in
>
> "And a little after that Gautrek begot a child with his wife, and he was a
> boy-child
> and was the father of a king" -
> or does it mean that he was fathered by a king
>
> I wonder would they make a point of that - Mrs. Gautrek - would not have
> been
> unfaithful - ?? not even with a king
> I am just home from College and just noticed this I like to take part when
> I
> can
> Kveðja
> Patricia
>
> -------Original Message-------
>
> From: Haukur Þorgeirsson
> Date: 06/01/2009 14:27:03
> To: norse_course@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: RE: [norse_course] Lesson question
>
> Indeed. But here's a tricky little passage from Hrólfs saga
> Gautrekssonar,
> describing the birth of the eponymous hero:
>
> "Ok eigi miklu síðar getr Gautrekr barn við konu sinni. Þat var sveinbarn
> ok var færðr konungi."
>
> What do you make of that?
>
> Regards,
> Haukur
>
>
>> bátr (boat) is, grammatically, a masculine noun. Any pronoun that
>> refers
>> to bátr must also be, grammatically, masculine, in all cases, and both
>> singular and plural. Hence, hann (nominative masculine singular) is
>> here
>> used to refer to ‘it’, ie hann may be translated into English as either
>> ‘he’ or ‘it’ depending on whether the noun to which it refers, while
>> grammatically masculine, is in the real world masculine or genderless.
>>
>> I hope this helps.
>>
>> Cheers
>> Alan
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: norse_course@yahoogroups.com
>> [mailto:norse_course@yahoogroups.com]
>> On Behalf Of commander_dagda
>> Sent: Monday, 5 January 2009 3:12 PM
>> To: norse_course@yahoogroups.com
>> Subject: [norse_course] Lesson question
>>
>> I am working on the lessons from hi.is. In lesson 2, part of the
>> exercise is to translate:
>>
>> Óláfr á bát. Hann heitir Ormr.
>>
>> I am thinking that it is supposed to be:
>>
>> Olaf owns a boat. It is called Ormr.
>>
>> But the original uses the pronoun "hann," where I'm thinking it
>> should be "þat." Otherwise, wouldn't it be, "he is called Ormr?"
>>
>> Óláfr á bát. "þat" heitir Ormr.
>>
>> Nominative case: I you he she it
>> Accusative case: me you him her it
>>
>> Nominative case: ek þú hann hon þat
>> Accusative case: mik þik hann hana þat
>>
>> Thank you!
>>
>> No virus found in this incoming message.
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>> 1/5/2009 9:44 AM
>>
>>
>
>
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