fulltrui

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See also: fulltrúi

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Icelandic fulltrúi (one who is fully trusted).

Noun

fulltrui (plural fulltruis)

  1. (Germanic paganism) A deity to whom one is wholeheartedly and/or exclusively devoted.
    • 2009, Galina Krasskova, Raven Kaldera, quoting Elizabeth Vongvisith, Northern Tradition for the Solitary Practitioner: A Book of Prayer, Devotional Practice, and the Nine Worlds of the Spirit, page 175:
      Perhaps my fulltrui and god-husband isn’t always the most truthful, but one of the things he has taught me to value is following through once you've said you'll do something.
    • 2013, Patricia M. Lafayllve, A Practical Heathen's Guide to Asatru, page 156:
      Let’s say a person vows to become fulltrui to Frey.
    • 2017, Diana L. Paxson, Odin: Ecstasy, Runes, & Norse Magic, unnumbered page:
      He does not object to my contacts with other gods; indeed, through me, he seems eager to meet them, but he is my fulltrui, the fully trusted one, with whom (or perhaps I should say for whom) I have now worked for thirty years.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:fulltrui.