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Old Norse
Etymology
Identical to lúðr (“coffin, cradle, log on which a windmill rests”), which Pokorny connects to Proto-Germanic *lawwō (“groove”).[1]
Noun
lúðr m (genitive lúðrs)
- lur, trumpet, horn
- 1951, Guðni Jónsson (ed.), Þiðreks saga af Bern, Hefndir Sifka, (normalised version of Bertelsen's edition), Reykjavík
En Erminrekr konungr lætr á sömu stundu við kveða alla sína lúðra ok lætr Kalla, at allir hans menn skulu taka vápn sín ok hesta. [...] Nú lætr Erminrekr konungr blása sínum lúðrum ok stefnir til sín öllum riddurum ok hefir marga riddara ok ríðr til fundar Egarðs ok hans bróður. Ok er Fritila kemr einn dag at Rín, hlaupa þeir af hestum sínum ok á ána út, liafa hestana með sér yfir ána.- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- Saga Hákonar, Guttorms ok Inga 12, in 1835, F. Magnússon, C. C. Rafn, Fornmanna sögur, Volume IX. Copenhagen, page 30:
- Þorfinnr kom aungu hljóði í lúðrinn,
- Thorfinn couldn't blow a sound from the trumpet,
1860, C. R. Unger, Karlamagnúss saga, Christiania:Hann rétti fram hönd sína og tók Olivant hinn hvella lúðr af hálsi honum.- He reached out his hand and took Olivant's banging trumpet from his neck
- blása í lúðr ― blow the trumpet
- the stand of a hand-mill
- a vessel (originally a hollowed out tree trunk)
Declension
Declension of lúðr (strong a-stem)
Descendants
See also
References
Further reading
- “lúðr” in Dictionary of Old Norse Prose (ONP) at University of Copenhagen