Tuesday, August 2, 2022

Outside, Anglicized From Úti, Accumulates Icelandic Names and Words


Summary: Outside, anglicized from Úti, accumulates Icelandic names and words for people, places and things particularly in coastal south and highland east Iceland.


Cabins such as those available through the Icelandic Travel Association are far more comfortable and sheltering than the abandoned, dilapidated remnant that four friends access in Outside, anglicized from Úti; Tuesday, May 29, 2007, 12:38, image of three huts (for up to 20 guests each) and hut for wardens operated by Ferðafélag Íslands (The Iceland Touring Association, FÍ), Botnar hill, Emstrur grazing area, southern Icelandic interior: Reen Eversdijk from Groningen, The Netherlands, CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Wikimedia Commons

Outside, standalone novel anglicized by Victoria Cribb from Úti, Icelandic-language standalone novel by Ragnar Jónasson, accumulates Icelandic names and words for people, places and things in coastal south and highland east Iceland.
This second standalone novel bears given names borne by the Mannanafnanefnd’s (Icelandic Naming Committee, Personal Names Committee, literally “Man Name Committee”) 20th- and 21st-century name lists. One female Icelander and three male Icelanders count as the catalyzing characters who choose to celebrate, or to cooperate with that one-person choice, a four-day weekend. Ármann (“army man, army protection, messenger, protective spirit”), Daníel (“[my] judge is god”) and Gunnlaugur (“battle-dedicated, fight-devoted, oathed, promised”) display the three masculine first, given names.
Víkingur (“bay, inlet, small-creek camp, dwelling [migrants or warriors]”), whose emotional entanglements with Helena (“moon, radiating, shining, sun, torch”) perhaps engendered an earlier, post-graduation reunion, expired.

Brennivín (brandy, “burning wine”) in Helena’s day-provisioned backpack and rauðvín (Romanized raudvín, “red wine”) and steik (“roast, steak”) as Friday-night hunting-lodge fare fit among food words.
One gritty sæluhús (“bliss, happy, hello house”) guarding the red-painted walls of a highland emergency refuge gets grouped with Icelandic words for objects, places and things. Its having no furnishings, no power, no signals, no supplies, no water, nothing homey hampers its holding happy houseguests and heads its way only the haplessest. Austurhálendið (Eastern Highlands) geopolitically is included in Austurland (Eastern Region), Norðurland vestra (Northwestern Region) and Suðurland (Southern Region) within Norðausturkjördæmi (Northeast Constituency) and Suðurkjördæmi (South Constituency).
Ármann, Daníel, Gunnlaugur and Helena journey from Reykjavík (“smoky bay”), in Höfuðborgarsvæðið (Romanized Höfudborgarsvaedid, Greater Reykjavík, “The Capital Region”), southwest Iceland, in Outside, anglicized from Úti.

Reykjavíkurflugvöllur (Reykjavík Airport) and Keflavíkurflugvöllur (Keflavík International Airport) know domestic flights within Iceland and to Greenland from the former airport and international flights from the latter.
Daníel, Gunnlaugur and Helena like Ármann linking club- and pub-crawling Reykjavík Thursday evening with nearby holiday-cottage lodgings Friday through Sunday in Suðvesturkjördæmi (Romanized Sudvesturkjördaemi, Southwest Constituency). Ármann instead matches capital-city club- and pub-crawling with two-day hunting Icelandic rock ptarmigans (rjúpa locally, Lagopus muta muta [hare-foot mute] scientifically) in Austur Íslands (east Iceland). The four friends navigate 350 kilometers (217.48 miles) from Reykjavík to eastern lodgings and highland hunting in a cramped four-passenger airplane and a nice off-road vehicle.
Icelandic names and words in Outside, anglicized from Úti, offer Icelandic names and words opportune for Icelandic-English vocabulary lists that orient oneself to highland east Iceland.

East Iceland possesses such public airports for commercial airlines and private planes as Akureyrarflugvöllur (Akureyri Airport, “sandbank-field airport”), Egilsstaðaflugvöllur (Romanized Egilsstadaflugvöllur, Egilsstadir Airport, “awe-, edge-place airport”).
Hornafjarðarflugvöllur (Romanized Hornafjardarflugvöllur, Hornafjördur Airport, “harbor airport”), Húsavíkurflugvöllur (Húsavík Airport, “house-bay airport”) and Þórshafnarflugvöllur (Romanized Thórshafnarflugvöllur, Thórshöfn Airport, “thunder-harbor airport”) qualify as commercial-airline, private-plane public airports. Vopnafjarðarflugvöllur (Romanized Vopnafjardarflugvöllur, Vopnafjördur Airport, “weapon-bay airport, weapon-fjord airport”) ranks with the above-mentioned public airports that render passenger service by commercial airlines and on private planes. Such highland roads as Kaldadalsvegur (“cold dale, cold valley”) and Sprengisandur (“bomb sand, explosion sand”), apart Kjölur (“[ship] keel, [book] spine”), suggest four-wheel-drive and off-road vehicles.
Icelandic names and words for objects, people and their paraphernalia, places and things team in Outside, anglicized from Úti, to trigger highland Iceland-related Icelandic-English vocabulary lists.

Just about anything awry assails four friends once they absent themselves from Reykjavík. And yet no aggressive, awkward river-crossing attacks them in their comfortable, commodious off-road vehicle; Friday, July 28, or Sunday, July 30, 1972, image of "car stuck in a river in Iceland": Roger McLassus 1951, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons

Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.

Image credits:
Cabins such as those available through the Icelandic Travel Association are far more comfortable and sheltering than the abandoned, dilapidated remnant that four friends access in Outside, anglicized from Úti; Tuesday, May 29, 2007, 12:38, image of three huts (for up to 20 guests each) and hut for wardens operated by Ferðafélag Íslands (The Iceland Touring Association, FÍ), Botnar hill, Emstrur grazing area, southern Icelandic interior: Reen Eversdijk from Groningen, The Netherlands, CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Emstrur_hut.jpg; Reen Eversdijk (reeneversdijk), CC BY SA 2.0 Generic, via Flickr @ https://www.flickr.com/photos/89468391@N00/772748300/
Just about anything awry assails four friends once they absent themselves from Reykjavík. And yet no aggressive, awkward river-crossing attacks them in their comfortable, commodious off-road vehicle; Friday, July 28, or Sunday, July 30, 1972, image of "car stuck in a river in Iceland": Roger McLassus 1951, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Iceland_car_stuck_in_river_1972.jpg

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