"stoor worm" meaning in English

See stoor worm in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Noun

Forms: stoor worms [plural]
Etymology: The first element may be stoor, stour (“large, stout”) (cognate to Old Norse stórr), or it may be from Old Norse Storðar-gandr (literally “world-monster”), an alternative name for Jörmungandr, from poetic use of storð to mean "earth", whence storðar men, "earth's necklace", i.e. "sea" (storð more often meant "wood" and storðar-gandr more often meant "wood's bane" i.e. "fire"). The second element is worm (“sea-dragon”). Etymology templates: {{m|en|stour|stoor, stour|large, stout}} stoor, stour (“large, stout”), {{cog|non|stórr}} Old Norse stórr, {{m|non|Storðar-gandr|lit=world-monster}} Storðar-gandr (literally “world-monster”), {{m|non|storð}} storð, {{m|non|storðar men}} storðar men, {{m|en|worm||sea-dragon}} worm (“sea-dragon”) Head templates: {{en-noun}} stoor worm (plural stoor worms)
  1. A giant sea serpent or sea dragon in Orcadian folklore, which had putrid breath, probably an Orkney version of Jörmungandr. Wikipedia link: stoor worm Categories (topical): Mythological creatures Synonyms: Stoor Worm, stoorworm

Inflected forms

Alternative forms

Download JSON data for stoor worm meaning in English (4.0kB)

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  "etymology_text": "The first element may be stoor, stour (“large, stout”) (cognate to Old Norse stórr), or it may be from Old Norse Storðar-gandr (literally “world-monster”), an alternative name for Jörmungandr, from poetic use of storð to mean \"earth\", whence storðar men, \"earth's necklace\", i.e. \"sea\" (storð more often meant \"wood\" and storðar-gandr more often meant \"wood's bane\" i.e. \"fire\"). The second element is worm (“sea-dragon”).",
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          "text": "Madness, like a Stoor Worm, moved continuously under their feet, making every step they took full of terror. Phelim peered at each face, but could see no one who resembled his dimly remembered father. Besides, it was difficult: […]",
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          "ref": "2003, Donald Omand, The Orkney Book, Birlinn Publishers",
          "text": "The Muckle Mester Stoor Worm was the father of all the terrible stoor worms that lived in the sea - huge sea monsters that destroyed ships and breathed poison over the land.",
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          "text": "Now, I don't suppose that you are familiar with the internal plumbing of a stoor worm, so I had better explain. There was a large tunnel that ran right through the stoor worm, but here and there were smaller tunnels running off the big one […]",
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          "text": "Now, I don't suppose that you are familiar with the internal plumbing of a stoor worm, so I had better explain. There was a large tunnel that ran right through the stoor worm, but here and there were smaller tunnels running off the big one […]",
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-05-01 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-04-21 using wiktextract (f4fd8c9 and c9440ce). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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