I've unlisted the 30 separate videos for this series. If you want to find a specific rune, here is the playlist: th-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:
th-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
I loved this series
You can see the progression of the domestication of humanity with these letters and their use.
Fantastic
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...
Yes
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.
Although the Icelandic runic poem mentions "þ" as "þurs", we call the letter "þ" "þorn".
Runeforce powers.
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