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Ending for Senegal or legal

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Possible Answers:
ESE.

Last seen on: Daily Beast Crossword Sunday, 17 September 2023

Random information on the term “ESE”:

The Æsir are the gods of the principal pantheon in Old Norse religion and Norse mythology. The second Norse pantheon is the Vanir; these two pantheons waged war against each other, resulting in a unified pantheon.

Æsir is the plural of áss, ǫ́ss “god”. In genitival compounds, it takes the form ása-, e.g. in Ása-Þórr (“Thor of the Æsir”), besides ás- found in ás-brú “gods’ bridge” (the rainbow), ás-garðr, ás-kunnigr “blood-related with the gods”, ás-liðar “the troops of the gods”, ás-megin “gods’ might” (especially of Thor), ás-móðr “divine wrath” etc. Land-áss “national god” (patrium numen) is a title of Thor, as is allmáttki áss “almighty god”, while it is Odin who is “the” áss. There is also Old East Norse dialectal *ās-ækia (OWN: *áss-ekja), i.e. “god ride” (Thor riding in his wagon), resulting in the modern Swedish word for atmospheric thunder – åska (the form åsekia attested as late as the 17th c.).

The feminine form is ásynja (plural ásynjur). The feminine suffix -ynja (Proto-Norse: -unjō) is known from a few other nouns denoting female animals, such as apynja “female monkey”, vargynja “she-wolf”. A cognate word for “goddess” is not attested outside Old Norse, and a corresponding West Germanic word would have been separately derived with the feminine suffixes -inī or -injō.

ESE on Wikipedia

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