glome การใช้
- In the language of early Viking explorers, GLOME DAL means " Valley owned by Glome ."
- In the language of early Viking explorers, GLOME DAL means " Valley owned by Glome ."
- Psyche is so beautiful that the people of Glome begin to offer sacrifices to her as to a goddess.
- Glome painstakingly etched an inscription on this billboard-size rock in Old Norse runes, which are alphabet characters formerly used by ancient Europeans.
- If a Viking named Glome stood here and chipped his land claim into this rock centuries before Y1K, I'm even more impressed.
- The eight runes, according to Dr . Richard Nielsen, a runologist who received his doctorate at the University of Denmark, spell GLOME DAL.
- I am standing in this mountain valley before this huge rock in the exact same spot where a Norse Viking named Glome stood nearly 1, 400 years ago.
- The Glome marker now is the centerpiece of Heavener Runestone State Park on Poteau Mountain on the outskirts of Heavener, Okla ., population about 2, 800 and about 10 miles from the Arkansas border.
- Exploring the Mississippi River and its tributaries, the Vikings supposedly ascended the Arkansas River and then proceeded up the Poteau River to a point merely three miles from Glome's boundary marker here on Poteau Mountain.
- NETHAWAY-COLUMN _ POTEAU MOUNTAIN, Okla . _ I am standing in this mountain valley before this huge rock in the exact same spot where a Norse Viking named Glome stood nearly 1, 400 years ago.
- A Norseman named Glome pounded out this boundary marker on land he claimed as his own a half century or so before Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue in 1492 in search of India and became known as the first European discoverer of America.
- Columbus, who never set foot in North America, has parades in his honor in American cities while Glome and his pre-Columbian Norsemen buddies were carving " No trespassing " signs on rocks in eastern Oklahoma hundreds of years before Columbus was born.
- She has always been ugly, but after her mother dies and her father the King of Glome remarries, she gains a beautiful half-sister Istra, whom she loves as her own daughter, and who is known throughout the novel by the Greek version of her name, Psyche.