Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun The great ash tree that holds together earth, heaven, and hell by its roots and branches.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun In Scand. myth., the ash-tree which binds together heaven, earth, and hell.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • proper noun The World Tree in Norse mythology. The great ash tree.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun (Norse mythology) a huge ash tree whose roots and branches hold the earth and Heaven and Hell together

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Old Norse.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Old Norse Yggdrasill. Commonly accepted as being composed yggr ("terrible") + drasill ("steed"), where “steed” refers to a hanging tree.

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Examples

  • For the same reason, the Scandinavian cultures of northern Europe depicted the Universe as a great tree, which they called Yggdrasil, or “World Tree,” another teaching tool for the web of life.

    Spiritual Teachings of the Avatar Jeffrey Armstrong 2010

  • For the same reason, the Scandinavian cultures of northern Europe depicted the Universe as a great tree, which they called Yggdrasil, or “World Tree,” another teaching tool for the web of life.

    Spiritual Teachings of the Avatar Jeffrey Armstrong 2010

  • For the same reason, the Scandinavian cultures of northern Europe depicted the Universe as a great tree, which they called Yggdrasil, or “World Tree,” another teaching tool for the web of life.

    Spiritual Teachings of the Avatar Jeffrey Armstrong 2010

  • That was how it got the name Yggdrasil, the Horse of the Terrible One.

    Operation Luna Anderson, Poul, 1926- 1999

  • It became popularly known as Yggdrasil, after the world tree of ancient Norse mythology.

    Family Tree Matthew Sanborn Smith 2007

  • It became popularly known as Yggdrasil, after the world tree of ancient Norse mythology.

    Archive 2007-01-01 Matthew Sanborn Smith 2007

  • _Lead by renegade nun CRYSTAL SPIRIT, the Facers plan to launch their own expedition to a habitable extra solar planet called Yggdrasil, which circles Eta Cassiopeia, some twenty light years from our Sun.

    Analog Science Fiction and Fact 2004

  • _The World-Ash_, generally called Yggdrasil's Ash, is one of the most interesting survivals of tree-worship.

    The Edda, Volume 1 The Divine Mythology of the North, Popular Studies in Mythology, Romance, and Folklore, No. 12 L. Winifred Faraday

  • Along the Hume Hwy. east of Eden, a concrete Mountain Ash dubbed Yggdrasil boasts a wide-screen computer enhanced vista: an arrow-straight monorail running from Uluru clean through the Olgas.

    Unmanned Stephen Oliver

  • But where the Norse axis was a sacred ash tree called Yggdrasil, Dorchen's is a poker table.

    Chicago Reader 2009

Comments

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  • Well now I'm confused. On Etymonline, it said the Ygg part was Odin, and drasil was horse. Here it says it's terrible + hanging tree. Oof. What's going on here?

    December 3, 2020

  • There seem to be alternative interpretations. I think the Wiktionary one cited on this page is not in fact commonly accepted. Wikipedia agrees with Etymonline.

    Important note: Etymonline is entirely the project of a single very prolific old guy.

    December 4, 2020