/dræʉɡ/
OriginInherited from Old Norse draugr. First attested in the 17th century in glossaries of David Klim and Thomas Bloch.
- masculinea corporeal undead from Norse mythology and Norwegian folklore, usually believed to be living in water, although land-draugar are also heard of.
“Og liver Nokon, som ikke Liv af Kjærleik saug, daa gjeng han atter og sviv og driv som bleike Draug.” — If someone lives, who did not draw his life from love, then he walks about, wandering aimlessly, like the pale ghost.
Formsdraugen(definite, singular) · draugar(indefinite, plural) · draugane(definite, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0