vatn

Etymology
From, from , ultimately from.

Noun

 * 1)  water (H₂O)
 * 2)  sea
 * 3) body fluid
 * 4) lake

Usage notes

 * kasta sær av vatni(num) - to pee

Derived terms

 * (teirra) - "there runs no water between them" (they are best friends)
 * - water comes back, where water has been

Etymology
From, from , ultimately from.

Noun

 * 1)  water (H₂O)
 * Vatnið er mjög tært.
 * The water is very clear.
 * 1)  a lake, a water
 * Á Arnarvatnsheiði er fjöldi vatna.
 * On Arnarvatnsheiði [there] is a multitude of lakes.
 * 1) * Genesis 1-3 (English, Icelandic)
 * Guð sagði: „Verði festing milli vatnanna, og hún greini vötn frá vötnum.“
 * And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.

Etymology
From, from , ultimately from. Akin to 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) water (chemical substance)
 * 2) a (smaller) lake
 * 3) bodily fluid that looks like water
 * 1) bodily fluid that looks like water
 * 1) bodily fluid that looks like water

Etymology
From, whence also Old Saxon and Old Dutch , Old English , Old Frisian , Old High German. Ultimately from. Note that the Proto-Germanic stem of this word alternated between ending in -r (nominative and accusative singular) and in -n (other forms). The Old Norse word preserves the alternative stem ending in -n which was lost in most Germanic languages (the exception being 🇨🇬, genitive ), leveling the nominative and accusative singular forms to also use this stem. Other Germanic languages typically leveled the paradigm of this word to be based entirely on the -r stem (e.g. 🇨🇬, genitive ).

Noun

 * 1) water
 * 2) lake
 * 3) waterway, river