Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.) 2017, ‘Gautreks saga 16 (Starkaðr gamli Stórvirksson, Víkarsbálkr 8)’ in Margaret Clunies Ross (ed.), Poetry in fornaldarsögur. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 8. Turnhout: Brepols, p. 262.
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2. þá (adv.): then
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safna (verb): gather
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Sørkvir (noun m.)
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3. ok (conj.): and, but; also
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grettir (noun m.; °-s): Grettir
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arfþegi (noun m.): heir
[3] arfþegi: ‘ok horfþegi’ 152, ok arfþegi papp11ˣ
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2. Hildigrímr (noun m.)
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Erpr (noun m.): Erpr
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3. ok (conj.): and, but; also
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3. Ulfr (noun m.): Úlfr
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skúmr (noun m.)
[6] Skúmi: so papp11ˣ, Skúmi with i corrected from u above the line 590b‑cˣ, Skútu 152
[6] Skúmi ‘Skúmr’: This pers. n. is assumed to be the dat. sg. of skúmr ‘brown gull, skua, chatterer, gossip’, but some eds (Gautr 1900; Edd. Min.; FSGJ) prefer the form Skúmu, from the nom. sg. Skúma ‘Dusky’ (?). There is certainly evidence for the existence of skúma as a nickname; cf. Biography of the poet Þorleifr skúma in SkP I, where various forms of skúma and skúmr and their likely meanings are discussed.
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hrotti (noun m.; °-a): sword
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Herbrandr (noun m.)
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sonr (noun m.; °-ar, dat. syni; synir, acc. sonu, syni): son
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After Víkarr has got Starkaðr off the floor at Askr, he equips him with clothes and weapons and gathers a troop of champions (kappar) and duellists (hólmgǫngumenn). Vík 8 and 9 (Gautr 16 and 17) are then introduced with the words Svá segir Starkaðr ‘So says Starkaðr’.
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