I've unlisted the 30 separate videos for this series. If you want to find a specific rune, here is the playlist: ua-cam.com/play/PLxwyMukpRj4FdFQKUVmoyLjE3uf7wqRs4.html
In the book, Etymology of the Lines in the Hebrew Alphabet, the lines of the A in the Elder and Younger Futhark are the same lines we can see in the Hebrew letter Aleph: but, in different places...
In Icelandic, "úr" means "out of", and "úrkoma" means "precipitation", that is "which comes out of". "úr" comes from Old Norse "ór" = "out of", while "úr" meant "drizzle" in Old Norse. I don't know what the actual origin is. I guess the second one.
I've unlisted the 30 separate videos for this series. If you want to find a specific rune, here is the playlist:
ua-cam.com/play/PLxwyMukpRj4FdFQKUVmoyLjE3uf7wqRs4.html
Regarding "cen/kaun": In German, "Kien" means "resinous wood", and "Kienspan" "fatwood", with "Span" meaning "chip, shaving". It's related to "spoon".
Great series indeed and nice conclusion part too. A year's worth of work come to fruition, congratulations!
Bloody fantastic mate, thank you for compiling it all, you're a champion
In the book, Etymology of the Lines in the Hebrew Alphabet, the lines of the A in the Elder and Younger Futhark are the same lines we can see in the Hebrew letter Aleph: but, in different places...
I loved this series
In Icelandic, "úr" means "out of", and "úrkoma" means "precipitation", that is "which comes out of". "úr" comes from Old Norse "ór" = "out of", while "úr" meant "drizzle" in Old Norse. I don't know what the actual origin is. I guess the second one.
Fantastic
Runeforce powers.
Yes
Although the Icelandic runic poem mentions "þ" as "þurs", we call the letter "þ" "þorn".
This is a video purpose-built for people who are high as fuck but cba changing the video
it may hve been written in christian times" but by people who hearkened back to Paganism