{"product_id":"english-to-old-norse-dictionary","title":"English to Old Norse Dictionary","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cem\u003eEnglish to Old Norse\u003c\/em\u003e is not a modern dictionary dressed in antique costume. It is a bridge built from smoke, salt, iron, and memory; a lexicon designed to let contemporary English thought walk into the older world without shattering it. Old Norse was a language born of hearth-fires and oaths, of ships cutting through black water and words spoken once because they could not be taken back. It had no need for machines of steel or distant abstractions; it named what could be hunted, sworn upon, feared, or loved. This book respects that reality rather than forcing the past to kneel to the present.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eEach entry offers more than a translation. Words are paired with cultural gravity: how a term functioned in saga, law, ritual, and daily survival. Meanings are shaped by honor, kinship, vengeance, hospitality, and fate. When a modern concept has no direct Old Norse equivalent, the solution is not invention for convenience, but adaptation with restraint; drawing from cognate roots, poetic constructions, or metaphors the Norse themselves would have recognized. The result is not anachronism, but echo: modern sense carried inside an ancient frame.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe structure moves alphabetically, yet the soul of the book is thematic. Repeated motifs emerge; debt and gift, blood and silver, courage and doom—revealing how language itself enforced a worldview where actions outweighed intent and reputation outlived the body. Brief notes accompany entries, grounding each word in saga logic: how it might have been spoken at the þing, whispered before battle, or remembered long after death. These notes are not academic footnotes; they are narrative fragments, reminders that language was once inseparable from consequence.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eBeyond vocabulary, the book includes essential cultural anchors: numbers, days, months, the Norse ritual year, Elder Futhark runes, and a pronunciation guide. Together, these elements allow the reader not merely to translate, but to think in cadence with the old tongue. This makes the book equally useful for writers, world-builders, historians, role-players, and scholars who seek texture rather than surface accuracy.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe guiding principle throughout is restraint with reverence. The aim is not to modernize Old Norse, nor to fossilize it, but to let English ideas pass through it honestly—slowed, reshaped, and sometimes refused. What emerges is a working lexicon with teeth: poetic, severe, and grounded in a worldview where words bind, names weigh heavy, and nothing spoken is ever entirely safe. This is a book for those who want their language to smell of woodsmoke and sea-spray, and who understand that every word, once uttered, becomes a deed.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"None","offers":[{"title":"Livre numérique Kobo","offer_id":46712590401746,"sku":"2c575191-aba0-3aa4-ba79-b79e1d71df32","price":9.99,"currency_code":"CAD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0655\/8980\/5233\/files\/image_4a62c56a-dfaa-4dec-8090-90889cb4be55.jpg?v=1770426064","url":"https:\/\/www.indigo.ca\/fr\/products\/english-to-old-norse-dictionary","provider":"Indigo","version":"1.0","type":"link"}