Mannaz
*Mannaz is the conventional name of the m-rune ᛗ of the Elder Futhark. It is derived from the reconstructed Common Germanic word for "man", *mannaz.
Name | Proto-Germanic | Old English | Old Norse | |
---|---|---|---|---|
*Mannaz | Mann | Maðr | ||
"man, human" | ||||
Shape | Elder Futhark | Futhorc | Younger Futhark | |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ||
Unicode | ᛗ U+16D7 | ᛘ U+16D8 | ᛙ U+16D9 | |
Transliteration | m | |||
Transcription | m | |||
IPA | [m] | |||
Position in rune-row | 20 | 14 |

Two early forms of the m-rune of the Younger Futhark.
Younger Futhark ᛘ is maðr ("man"). It took up the shape of the algiz rune ᛉ, replacing Elder Futhark ᛗ.
As its sound value and form in the Elder Futhark indicate, it is derived from the letter M (𐌌) in the Old Italic alphabets, ultimately from the Greek letter Mu (Μ).
Rune poems
The rune is recorded in all three Rune Poems, in the Norwegian and Icelandic poems as maðr, and in the Anglo-Saxon poem as man.
Rune Poem:[1] | English Translation: |
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Icelandic
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Modern usage
For the "man" rune of the Armanen Futharkh as "life rune" in Germanic mysticism, see Lebensrune.
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gollark: If you just have a stream, you often have to handle stuff like figuring out exactly where each bit of it starts and ends, which is annoying when there's an underlying packetized protocol anyway.
gollark: Or possibly some API which lets you mix both somehow, that would be neat.
gollark: Honestly, I think that in many applications arbitrary-size packets map better to what you're doing than streams.
gollark: Apart from the address caching.
References
- Original poems and translation from the Rune Poem Page Archived 1999-05-01 at the Wayback Machine ("Ragnar's Ragweed Forge").
See also
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Look up Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/mann- in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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Look up maðr in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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