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  • Warg - Wikipedia
    In Norse mythology, a vargr (anglicised as warg) is a wolf, especially the wolf Fenrir that destroyed the god Odin in the battle of Ragnarök, and the wolves Sköll and Hati, Fenrir's children, who perpetually chase the Sun and Moon
  • Wargs - Tolkien Gateway
    J R R Tolkien derived the word warg from Old English wearg-, Old High German warg-, and Old Norse varg -r , all of these terms literally translating to strangler, choker
  • Warg | Wiki of Westeros | Fandom
    Warging is a separate ability from the Sight, the psychic ability to perceive future and past events in dreams However, some people who are wargs can also possess the Sight Wargs cannot easily enter the minds of other humans to control their actions, though few even attempt it
  • Wargs | The One Wiki to Rule Them All | Fandom
    Wargs were a breed of wolves, commonly living in the Misty Mountains, that served Sauron the Dark Lord and his agents in the conflicts of the Third Age Often in league with the nearby Northern Orcs, they were also used as mounts by the Orcs of Isengard and Mordor
  • Skinchanger - A Wiki of Ice and Fire
    A skinchanger or beastling[1][2] is a person with the ability to enter the mind of an animal and control its actions A skinchanger able to enter the mind of a wolf or dog is known as a warg [3] It is unknown if skinchangers are synonymous with or different from shapechangers
  • Worg - Monsters - D D Beyond
    Worgs speak in their own language and Goblin, and a few learn to speak Common as well
  • Folklore Fact – Wargs (or vargs or worgs) – Maegan A. Stebbins . . .
    The word “warg” comes from Old Norse “vargr” (plural “vargar”), meaning – essentially – “destroyer ” Originally, the term is thought to have meant “wolf,” but over time, it shifted to refer to criminals (with an inherent negative meaning) instead
  • warg - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
    warg (third-person singular simple present wargs, present participle warging, simple past and past participle warged) (fantasy, fandom slang) To possess the mind of (and see through the eyes of) another person or animal
  • The World Amateur Golf Rankings® (WAGR®) | The Official Mens and Women . . .
    The WORLD AMATEUR GOLF RANKING® ranks male and female amateur golfers by assessing performance at thousands of amateur golf tournaments and championships, worldwide
  • Wargs: Tolkien’s Monstrous Wolves of Malevolence and Wit
    To meet a warg, in his world or any world that echoes it, is to sense the edge where myth, language, and animal nature blur and sharpen Picture the warg as Tolkien saw it—enormous, shaggy, loping through the dusk, eyes gleaming not with bestial stupidity but with a chilling, malevolent wit





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