Diana Whaley 2012, ‘Old Norse-Icelandic Technical Terms’ in Diana Whaley (ed.), Poetry from the Kings’ Sagas 1: From Mythical Times to c. 1035. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 1. Turnhout: Brepols [check printed volume for citation].
aðalhending, ‘noble rhyme, chief rhyme’, a combination of two syllables participating in full internal rhyme (identical vowels and postvocalic environment) within a skaldic line. Normally aðalhending occurs in even lines (so ll. 2, 4, 6 and 8) of a dróttkvætt or hrynhent stanza.
áttmælt, ‘eight-times spoken’, a dróttkvætt stanza in which each of the eight lines contains a separate clause
bragarmál, poetic diction characterised by cliticisation, i.e. the suffixation of unstressed particles and pronouns, usually with loss of vowel
drápa, long encomiastic skaldic poem with stef
dróttkvætt, ‘court poetry’, the most common metre used in skaldic poetry, comprising stanzas of eight hexasyllabic lines, regular alliteration and hendingar (skothending in odd lines and aðalhending in even ones)
erfidrápa, ‘memorial poem’, encomium commemorating a deceased person
flokkr, long skaldic poem without stef
fornaldarsögur, see Other Technical Terms
fornyrðislag, ‘old story metre’, Old Norse development of the common Germanic alliterative long-line
fuþark, runic alphabet
Haðarlag, ‘Hǫðr’s metre’, regularised málaháttr lines with internal rhyme (skothending in odd lines and aðalhending in even ones)
hagmælt, ‘skilfully spoken’, fornyrðislag with internal rhyme (skothending in odd lines and aðalhending in even ones)
hálfhnept, ‘half-curtailed’, a skaldic metre in which the odd and even lines are made up of five to seven syllables (rarely four). Each line ends in a heavy monosyllable preceded by another heavy monosyllable or two resolved short syllables. The odd lines have two alliterative staves and the even lines one stave, which falls on the first lift. The metre is characterised by internal rhymes following the patterns of dróttkvætt (skothending in odd lines and aðalhending in even ones). The second hending always falls on the last syllable of the line.
háttr, metre, verse-form (lit. ‘mode, manner’)
heiti, poetic synonym, an alternative and often descriptive term or name for a frequently-occurring object or person mentioned in skaldic poetry, e.g. brim ‘surf’ or salt ‘salt’ for ‘sea’, or Yggr, an alternative name for the god Óðinn
helmingr (pl. helmingar), a half-stanza of normally four lines
hending (pl. hendingar), lit. ‘catching’, a syllable participating, with one other, in full internal rhyme (aðalhending) or partial rhyme (skothending) within a skaldic line
hrynhent, ‘flowing rhymed’, a skaldic metre, an expanded version of dróttkvætt in which each line contains eight syllables
hǫfuðstafr, ‘head (main) stave’, chief alliterating stave fixed in initial position of even lines of regular dróttkvætt and hrynhent stanzas
Íslendingasögur, ‘sagas of Icelanders’, also known as Icelandic Family Sagas
kenning, nominal periphrasis, consisting of a base-word and one or more determinants
klofastef, ‘split refrain’, a refrain (stef) in a skaldic encomium that has been split into individual lines that appear separately in different stanzas, usually as the first or the last line of a stanza
konungasögur, ‘kings’ sagas’
kviðuháttr, a skaldic metre (a variant of fornyrðislag) in which the odd lines consist of three syllables and the even lines of four syllables
lausavísa (pl. lausavísur), ‘freestanding stanza, loose stanza’, a separate stanza or part-stanza which does not belong to a long poem, and which is normally preserved as an integral part of a prose narrative
ljóðaháttr, ‘song metre’, a six-line metre in which ll. 1-2 and 4-5 alliterate, while ll. 3 and 6 alliterate internally
málaháttr, ‘speech metre’, an extended form of fornyrðislag with five metrical positions rather than four
mansǫngr, ‘love-song’, a genre of poetry
níð, shaming slander or abuse, typically containing implications of cowardice and/or passive homosexuality
nýgerving, nýgjǫrving, ‘new creation, new construction’, a term applied to the device of extending a metaphor from one kenning into another or into the verb of the clause
ofljóst, ‘too transparent, excessively clear’, play on words, punning, using homonyms
ókent heiti, ókent nafn, a heiti or noun without periphrasis
rekit, ‘driven’, a kenning of the same type as tvíkent, but extended more than once by the use of kennings as determinants
runhent, skaldic metres employing end rhyme
skothending, ‘inserted rhyme’, a combination of two syllables participating in partial internal rhyme (different vowels and similar postvocalic environments) within a skaldic line. Normally skothending occurs in odd lines (so ll. 1, 3, 5, and 7) of a dróttkvætt or hrynhent stanza.
slœmr, the concluding section of a poem
stef, the refrain of a skaldic drápa
stefjabálkr, the middle section of a drápa containing one or more refrains (stef)
stefjamél, each of the sets of stanzas ending with a refrain (stef), within a stefjabálkr
tvíkent, ‘doubly modified, doubly paraphrased’, an extended kenning in which the determinant is itself a kenning
tøglag, ‘journey metre’, a variant of fornyrðislag in which the even lines have aðalhending and the odd may have skothending
upphaf, ‘beginning’, the opening section of a skaldic poem, the section before the beginning of the stefjabálkr
vísa (pl. vísur), a skaldic stanza, in plural often a term used of a long poem lacking refrain (e.g. Sigvatr’s Víkingavísur)
þáttr, ‘strand’, a smaller, independent narrative usually embedded in or added to a saga
þula (pl. þulur), a list of poetic synonyms (heiti) in metrical form