IOR
Jēran
Jēran or Jæran (*j
ē2ram; Gothic jēr, Anglo-Frisian ȝēr /yēr/, Old High German and Old Saxon jār, Old Norse ār) "
harvest, (good)
year" is the reconstructed
Proto-Germanic name of the j-
rune of the
Elder Futhark. Proto-Germanic *jē2ram is cognate with
Avestan yāre "year",
Greek "year" (and "season", whence
hour), Slavonic jarŭ "spring" and with the -or- in Latin hornus "of this year" (from *ho-jōrinus), all from a
PIE stem .The rune in the
Anglo-Saxon Futhorc is continued as Gēr and Ior, the latter a
bind rune of
Gyfu and
Is (compare also
Ear). Its name is continued as ᛅ Ár in the Younger Futhark. The corresponding
Gothic letter is 𐌾 j, named jer, which is also based on the shape of the Elder Futhark rune. This is an exception, shared with
urus, due to the fact that neither the
Latin nor the
Greek alphabets at the time of the introduction of the Gothic one had graphemes corresponding to the distinction of
j and
w from i and u.
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Jeran
IOR
Jera
Jera (ᛃ) ist die zwölfte der 24
gemeingermanischen Runen und fehlt bei den 16
nordischen Runen. Der Name dieser
Rune leitet sich von dem Wort „Jahr“ ab und bedeutet so viel wie Ernte (Jahresernte). Die Form der Rune entspricht zwei gegenüber liegenden lateinischen
Js. Varianten: Jeran, JaraLautwert: JZahlwert: 12Spirituelle Bedeutung: Ernte
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IOR
Interoperable Object Reference