The Lord's Prayer written in Old Norse lettering |
Common Landscape
Names in Cumbria and Yorkshire
(derived
from Norse Words)
beck = stream, brook
brigg or brigge = bridge
cam = bank, slope, ridge
Easedale Beck in the Lake District |
carr = marshy woodland, shrubland
dale = valley
foss or force = waterfalls, rapids
Swaledale in the Yorkshire Dales |
garth = small grass enclosure beside a house
gate = way or street
gill or ghyll = small, narrow valley or ravine
Gaping Gill in Yorkshire |
hause = mountain pass
how = hill
keld or kell = spring or well
Keld photographed from the Pennine Way |
knott = rocky hilltop
laithe or leethe = barn, agricultural building
mell = sand dunes
mere = lake
Lake Windermere in the Lake District |
moss = bog, marsh
ness = headland, promontory
pike = peak
Scafell Pike in the Lake District |
scar or scaur = cliff or rocky outcrop with steep cliff
seat, set(t) or side = Summer pasture or dwelling place
sike, syke, or sitch = small stream or gulley, gutter
skyr = shire, county
slack = small valley or depression in the ground
Rossthwaite in the Borrowdale region |
tarn = lake or pond (especially in uplands)
thorp(e) or t(h)rop = village or small settlement
thwait(e) = village or small settlement
toft = small farmstead with enclosed land (later also
came to mean a village or small settlement)
Red Tarn in the Lake District |
Resources
Lakeland Terms: http://www.iainwest.com/celtic.htm
Yorkshire Terms: http://www.viking.no/e/england/yorkshire_norse.htm
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