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Fenrir has been depicted in the artwork Odin and Fenris (1909) and The Binding of Fenris (around 1900) by Dorothy Hardy, Odin und Fenriswolf and Fesselung des Fenriswolfe (1901) by Emil Doepler, and is the subject of the metal sculpture Fenrir by Arne Vinje Gunnerud located on the island of Askøy, Norway. [4]
It was plotted from air photos by the Third German Antarctic Expedition (1938–39), mapped from surveys and air photos by the Sixth Norwegian Antarctic Expedition (1956–60), and because of its shape named Fenriskjeften (Fenrir's jaw), after the wolf in Norse mythology. [1]
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A depiction of Víðarr stabbing Fenrir while holding his jaws apart by W. G. Collingwood, 1908, inspired by the Gosforth Cross. In Norse mythology, Víðarr (Old Norse: [ˈwiːðɑrː], possibly "wide ruler", [1] sometimes anglicized as Vidar / ˈ v iː d ɑːr /, Vithar, Vidarr, and Vitharr) is a god among the Æsir associated with vengeance.
Body shape has effects on body posture [30] and gait, and has a major role in physical attraction. This is because a body's shape implies an individual's hormone levels during puberty, which implies fertility, and it also indicates current levels of sex hormones. [1] A pleasing shape also implies good health and fitness of the body. Posture ...
Inverted. Think of an upside-down triangle, or V-shape. “Inverted butts have fullness at the hips and the top part of the butt, but narrow in size and shape at the bottom,” Dr. Levine describes.
The Fenris Brood, a Zerg faction in StarCraft; GTC Fenris-class cruiser in the FreeSpace, series; In Xenogears, Fenrir is the name of Citan's Omnigear; In Eve Online, Fenrir is the name of the Minmatar freighter; In Dragon Age II, Fenris is an elven warrior companion; In the Ace Combat series, Fenrir has been used as a squadron name on multiple ...
In early American editions of the book, Lewis changed the name to Fenris Ulf (a reference to Fenrisúlfr, a wolf from Norse mythology), [1] [2] [3] but when HarperCollins took over the books they took out Lewis' revisions, [4] and the name Maugrim has been used in all editions since 1994.