47 examples of icelandic in sentences

In the same work the Icelandic sagas, written in the fourteenth century, and containing the original accounts of the Northmen's voyages to Vinland, were first brought prominently before modern scholars.

For Brodie, callously brutish as he was, must be something less than human not to turn his chill blue Icelandic eyes toward the spot where he had abandoned his fallen companion.

It must be acted upon by a second Parliament, but its passage is assured, and Icelandic women will vote on the same terms as men in 1913.

I Once a number of Icelandic peasantry found a very thick skull in the cemetery where the poet Egil was buried.

Even the Icelandic colony in Greenland has disappeared, and the eastern coast, on which especially it was settled, has become long inaccessible, in consequence of the immense accumulation of ice in the straits between it and Iceland.

Morris's interest in Icelandic literature is further shown by his Sigurd the Volsung, an epic founded upon one of the old sagas, and by his prose romances, The House of the Wolfings, The Story of the Glittering Plain, and The Roots of the Mountains.

Kormak, an Icelandic Romance of the Tenth Century.

JamesonMastodon's tooth in MichiganCaptain MarryattThe Icelandic languageMunseesSpeech of Little Bear Skin chief, or Mukónsewyán.

JamesonMastodon's tooth in MichiganCaptain MarryattThe Icelandic languageMunseesSpeech of Little Bear Skin chief, or Mu-kónsewyán.

His translation of Rusk's Icelandic Grammar is a scholar-like performance, and every way indicative of the propensities of his mind for philological studies.

The Laxdaela saga; translated from the Icelandic, with an introd.

SEE Nordhoff, Charles. Skip; a strong Icelandic noun.

Four Icelandic sagas.

Four Icelandic sagas, translated from the Icelandic, with introd.

Four Icelandic sagas, translated from the Icelandic, with introd.

History of Icelandic prose writers, 1800-1940.

The Laxdaela saga; translated from the Icelandic, with an introd.

SEE Nordhoff, Charles. Skip; a strong Icelandic noun.

Four Icelandic sagas.

Four Icelandic sagas, translated from the Icelandic, with introd.

History of Icelandic prose writers, 1800-1940.

We see ancient Icelandic manuscripts, from de la Gardie's refined French saloon, and Thauberg's Japanese manuscripts.

See DARWIN, C. R. DASENT, SIR GEORGE WEBBE, Icelandic scholar, born at St. Vincent, West Indies; studied at Oxford; from 1845 to 1870 was assistant-editor of the Times; has translated "The Prose, or Younger, Edda" and Norse tales and sagas; written also novels, and contributed to reviews and magazines; b. 1817.

" SNORRI STURLASON, Icelandic historian and poet; published the collection of sagas entitled "Heimskringla," among which were many songs of his own composition; was a man of position and influence in Iceland, but having provoked the ill-will of Haco was at his instigation assassinated in 1241.

Upon their southward way They greet the beryl-tinted icebergs; greet Flamy volcanoes and the seething founts Of geysers, and the melancholy yellow Of the Icelandic fields; and, wearying Their lily wings amid the boreal lights, Journey away unto the joyous shores Of morning.

47 examples of  icelandic  in sentences