Please wait. Your file is being prepared and will be downloaded shortly.

Namn och bygd 2024

Printed Book

Out of stock

ePub

 

Read Online

 

Namn och bygd 2024

Tidskrift för nordisk namnforskning

Soft cover
139 pages
Published
2025
Language
swe

Staffan Nyström (red.), Eva Nyman (red.), Inge Særheim (red.)

Price from SEK 95

Back to issue

Sjönamnsstudier

Staffan Fridell

Source system: Publicera | Published: 2025-02-03 | Pages: 15-22

Abstract

Bolmen is a large lake in the province of Småland. Elof Hellquist interpreted its name as having been formed from the adjective *bolm ‘big’. However, it is not possible to infer the existence of such an adjective. Instead, Bolmen is likely a derivation with the m-suffix to the root bul- ‘swell’. Presumably, the large size of the lake is the reason behind its name.Lossen is a lake in the province of Härjedalen. It is an extension of the river Ljusnan, whose name is a Proto-Scandinavian *Luhsnō f. > Old Swedish Lusn, a derivative by ablaut of the root of the adjective ljus ‘light’. In this article Lossen is explained as a dehydronymic derivative *Luhsnan m. of the river name.Mæghin forms the first element of several Swedish place-names. Two interpretations exist, the man’s name Mæghin, and mæghin n. ‘force; strength’. The latter has been suggested for three lake names, Old Swedish *Mæghinsior. However, these names can likely be explained as elliptic reductions of *Mæghins[bodha]sior or similar.

Keywords

lake names; name formation; m-suffix; dehydronymic derivation; elliptic reduction

DOI | License | Original publication