Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1995, Side 64

Fróðskaparrit - 01.01.1995, Side 64
68 A NOTE ON THE DERIVATION OF FAROESE GRIND ently based on the report of a Faroese in- formant from 1592 (Storm, 1881: 427). In his account of whale hunting in the Faroes, Claussøn Friis connects the use of grind for schools of whales with the meaning of grind as a kind of wooden or iron lattice- work (Trelleverck) or grating (Riist), and suggests that the formation of the whales as they swim together resembles such a struc- ture: Alt hvad som er giort aff Træ eller Jæm udi Trelleverck saa som en Riist (cratis) det kald- is en Grind paa Norske, oc fordi at Hvaleme løbe jeffnsidis hos hin anden oc store hobe, naar de løbe paa læg, da kaldis den Hvalhob en Hvalsgrind, saa som i den tractat om Fiske mere er omrørt (Storm, 1881: 431-32). (Anything which is made of wood or iron in the form of a trellis/ latticework [Trelleverck], such as a grill or gate, is called grind in Norwegian, and because these whales swim side by side in large groups when they are mating, then that group of whales is called a Hvalsgrind, as was discussed in the treatise on fish.) This simple yet rather perplexing explana- tion has often been presented in later ac- counts of grindadráp as the commonly ac- cepted derivation of the word to refer to a school of pilot whales, and is also the first explanation offered by the Oxford English Dictionary (1991). It has also become something of a convention in many ac- counts of grindadráp, from general de- scriptions to scholarly works, ever since Claussøn Friis (see Petersen, 1968: 46; Wylie, 1981: 103). The latest example in this long tradition, a description of the Faroes from 1991, states in its chapter on »The Grind«: The word grind means gate. The whales will sometimes stop for a while in a dense school, and scholars believe the name may refer to the fact that a school has the appearance when pausing of a barred gate (Kjørsvik Schei and Moberg, 1991: 123). A second explanation for the derivation of grind is also connected with the sense of gate, but is linked rather to the methods of capture than the characteristics of the whales themselves. The Oxford English Dictionary provides the following explana- tion: Others explain it as referring to the mode of capture, the whales being fenced or penned in by a line of boats (1991). and Kjørsvik Schei also goes on in her ac- count to explain this altemative: It is also possible that the name simply refers to the old method of chasing the whales into a trap by closing some kind of gate behind them (Kjørsvik Schei and Moberg, 1991: 123). As concems the first interpretation of grind as a kind of barrier formed by the whales themselves, it seems unlikely that this is what really lies behind its semantic devel- opment to become a school of pilot whales. Regardless of how motionless the whales may seem when »pausing«, it is difficult to conceive of a large group of whales as re-
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