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Webster 1913 Edition


Kenning

Ken′ning

,
Noun.
[See
Ken
,
Verb.
T.
]
1.
Range of sight.
[Obs.]
Bacon.
2.
The limit of vision at sea, being a distance of about twenty miles.

Webster 1828 Edition


Kenning

KEN'NING

,
Noun.
View, sight.

Definition 2024


kenning

kenning

English

Noun

kenning (plural kennings)

  1. (obsolete) Sight; view; a distant view at sea.
  2. (obsolete) Range or extent of vision, especially at sea; (by extension) a marine measure of approximately twenty miles.
  3. As little as one can recognise or discriminate; a small portion; a little.
    put in a kenning of salt

Verb

kenning

  1. present participle of ken

Etymology 2

From ken (to beget, bring forth).

Noun

kenning (plural kennings)

  1. The tread of an egg; cicatricula.

Etymology 3

From Old Norse, from kenna (know, perceive), from Proto-Germanic *kannijaną, causative of *kunnaną (to know how). Compare can, ken, keen.

Noun

kenning (plural kennings)

  1. A metaphorical phrase used in Germanic poetry (especially Old English or Old Norse) whereby a simple thing is described in an allusive way, such as ‘whale road’ for ‘sea’, or ‘enemy of the mast’ for ‘wind’.
Translations

Icelandic

Noun

kenning f (genitive singular kenningar, nominative plural kenningar)

  1. a theory
  2. a religious doctrine, teaching
  3. a lesson
  4. (poetry) a kenning; (a circumlocution used instead of an ordinary noun in Old Norse, Old English and later Icelandic poetry)

Declension

This noun needs an inflection-table template.

Derived terms

  • láta sér að kenningu verða (to let something be a lesson to oneself)