Sagot :
Kenning-is a compound exprssion in Old English
examples:blood-ember
spear-din
slaughter-dew
examples:blood-ember
spear-din
slaughter-dew
the kenning is a compound expression in Old English and Old Norse poetry with metaphorical meaning, e.g., oar-steed = ship.
examples.
>"Obviously, in poetry where this was one of the most important mechanisms, the kennings for very common nouns (such as ‘man’ or ‘woman’) are various and inventive."
>They composed and recited poems in a fairly simple verse form which relied heavily on alliteration and also the use of kennings .
>Obviously, in poetry where this was one of the most important mechanisms, the kennings for very common nouns (such as ‘man’ or ‘woman’) are various and inventive.
>Hope it helps
don't copy my answer,it is based on my mind !!
From: TaengPark
examples.
>"Obviously, in poetry where this was one of the most important mechanisms, the kennings for very common nouns (such as ‘man’ or ‘woman’) are various and inventive."
>They composed and recited poems in a fairly simple verse form which relied heavily on alliteration and also the use of kennings .
>Obviously, in poetry where this was one of the most important mechanisms, the kennings for very common nouns (such as ‘man’ or ‘woman’) are various and inventive.
>Hope it helps
don't copy my answer,it is based on my mind !!
From: TaengPark