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Apr 14, 2020

[Answer] 7. By what Nordic word do we call a very large or violent whirlpool which is generally the result of conflicting tides?

Step 1 : Introduction to the question "7. By what Nordic word do we call a very large or violent whirlpool which is generally the result of conflicting tides?"



...1. Kraken 2. Maelstrom 3. Blotfisk 4. Sweloft It was Edgar Allan Poe who introduced this Nordic word into the English language, in his tale "A Descent into the Maelstrom". The term "maelstrom" is borrowed from the Dutch "maalstrom", meaning "grinding current". The original maelstrom, which excited the imagination of Poe and many other authors, is the Moskstraumen, a powerful tidal whirlpool in the Lofoten Islands, off the northern coast of Norway. Many fictional descriptions romanticised and exaggerated the violence of the Norwegian current, transforming it into a terrifying vortex. One example is to be found in Jules Verne's "Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea", where the author describes the Lofoten Maelstrom as "a whirlpool from which no vessel ever escapes".




Step 2 : Answer to the question "7. By what Nordic word do we call a very large or violent whirlpool which is generally the result of conflicting tides?"



Maelstrom:


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