thumb|Thor wades through a river while the other Æsir ride across the bridge [[Bifröst (1895) by Lorenz Frølich]] In Norse mythology, the Kerlaugar (plural form of Old Norse kerlaug "kettle-bath",) i.e. "bath-tub", are two rivers through which the god Thor wades. The Kerlaugar are attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional material, and in a citation of the same verse in the Prose Edda, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson.
Kerlaugar (isl. Kerlaugar) är mytologiska floder, genom vilka Tor måste vada varje dag, då han beger sig till tings under asken Yggdrasil. De två andra hette Kormt och Ormt. Dessa beskrivs bland annat i Sången om Grimner.
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).