Associations to the word «Thor»
Noun
- Loki
- Odin
- Rand
- Avenger
- Hammer
- Hulk
- Marvel
- Au
- Superhero
- Frey
- Thunder
- Serpent
- Jed
- Tam
- Hercules
- Surfer
- Stanza
- Mallet
- Pantheon
- Tar
- Dm
- Indra
- Giant
- Kon
- Wrestle
- Hyperion
- Mythology
- Wolverine
- Kirby
- Asha
- Al
- Cauldron
- Doom
- Elayne
- Thunderbolt
- Polynesia
- Stark
- Celestial
- Scandinavia
- Goat
- Missile
- Jupiter
- Uppsala
- Osborn
- Chariot
- Jensen
- Warhead
- Comic
- Troll
- Clone
- Sg
- Saga
- Modus
- Spider
- Viking
- Eternal
- Pedersen
- Zeus
- Able
- Venom
- Cavendish
- Scarlet
- Amulet
- Rune
- Storyline
- Executioner
- Burner
- Dwarf
- Raft
- Norwegian
- Fang
- Frost
- Deity
- Gauntlet
- Lightning
- Atlas
- Iceland
- Collect
- Perrin
- Almighty
- Boniface
Adjective
Wiktionary
THOR, proper noun. (Norse mythology) The god of thunder.
THOR, proper noun. A male given name occasionally borrowed from Scandinavia.
THOR, adverb. (Geordie) there
THOR, adverb. (Geordie) they're (they are)
THOR, pronoun. (Geordie) their
Dictionary definition
THOR, noun. (Norse mythology) god of thunder and rain and farming; pictured as wielding a hammer emblematic of the thunderbolt; identified with Teutonic Donar.
Wise words
Words to me were magic. You could say a word and it could
conjure up all kinds of images or feelings or a chilly
sensation or whatever. It was amazing to me that words had
this power.