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The meaning of these five bind runes is not understood.
Furthermore there are two bind runes with uncertain reading order.
However, it was also common to use bind runes to ornament and highlight names.
Pearce has also this bind rune as something of a signature.
A bind rune is a ligature of two or more runes.
The inscription features a facial mask and a bind rune in the text.
The inscription ends with five identical bind runes of which the last two are mirrored.
This is the only known certain Anglo-Saxon triple bind rune.
Thus all transliterations of bind runes are scholarly interpretations.
In some names on runestones, bind runes may have been ornamental and used to highlight the name.
There are two types of bind runes.
Bind runes are marked with an arch.
Vs 22 is the only inscription in Västmanland in which a bind rune was used.
The nacreous glow of binding runes cast sickly light upon his stark, shadowed face.
Ignoring what seem to be bind runes at the start of the inscription, he offered this transliteration:
The first word ranuiþi was spelled using a bind rune that combines an n-rune and u-rune.
In Westlund's opinion these are not complicated bind runes but elaborate forms of normal runes.
The inscription includes an image of a ship and uses same-stave bind runes to commemorate a man described as being a thegn.
The text is carved in the younger futhark and contains one bind rune, which is a ligature of two runes.
On this runestone, the runemaster used a bind rune to combine the s-rune and k-rune in skipari.
The runic text uses a bind rune, which is a ligature, combining an a-rune and l-rune in the name Svertingr.
Clary manages to convince the Clave to fight with the Downworlders and teaches them a binding rune that the dying angel showed her.
The inscription depicts a ship with an anchor and a portion of the runic text uses same-stave bind runes on the ship mast.
According to Westlund, Lindquist's attempts at deciphering the "bind runes" at the beginning of the inscription are misguided.
The bind rune was designed by Wiligut, and spells "Got" the Old High German word for God.