/ˈhaːɣʏr/
OriginFrom Old Norse hagr, from Proto-Germanic *hagaz (“skilled, handy”).
- masculinean advantage
- masculineeconomy
“Hagur fjölskyldunnar stóð með blóma.” — The family's 'finances were flourishing.
- masculinecircumstances
Formshagari(comparative) · hagastur(superlative) · hagur(masculine, nominative, strong) · hög(feminine, nominative, strong) · hagt(neuter, nominative, strong) · hagan(accusative, masculine, strong) · haga(accusative, feminine, strong) · hagt(accusative, neuter, strong) · högum(dative, masculine, strong) · hagri(dative, feminine, strong) · högu(dative, neuter, strong) · hags(genitive, masculine, strong) · hagrar(feminine, genitive, strong) · hags(genitive, neuter, strong) · hagir(masculine, nominative, strong) · hagar(feminine, nominative, strong) · hög(neuter, nominative, strong) · haga(accusative, masculine, strong) · hagar(accusative, feminine, strong) · hög(accusative, neuter, strong)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0