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== Powers and Abilities ==
 
== Powers and Abilities ==
'''Immortality:''' as a Norse God, Sif is immortal. Only a sufficiently powerful weapon or an extremely powerful being can kill her.
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*'''Immortality:''' as a Norse God, Sif is immortal. Only a sufficiently powerful weapon or an extremely powerful being can kill her.
   
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==

Revision as of 13:03, 15 March 2020

Template:Infobox gods

By Lady Sif's soft, perfect sloshers!

Brok about Sif

Sif is a Norse Goddess of Fertility, Wheat and Family. She is the mother of Ullr, wife of Thor and mother of his daughter.

Norse Mythology

The name Sif is the singular form of the plural Old Norse word sifjarSifjar only appears in singular form when referring to the goddess as a proper noun. Sifjar is cognate to the Old English sibb and modern English sib (meaning "affinity, connection, by marriage") and in other Germanic languages: Gothic 𐍃𐌹𐌱𐌾𐌰 (sibja), Old High German sippa, and modern German SippeSifjar appears not only in ancient poetry and records of law, but also in compounds (byggja sifjar means "to marry").

In Norse mythology, Sif is a goddess associated with earth. In both the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda, Sif is the wife of the thunder god Thor and is known for her golden hair. n the Prose Edda, Sif is named as the mother of the goddess Þrúðr by Thor and of Ullr with a father whose name is not recorded. The Prose Edda also recounts that Sif once had her hair shorn by Loki, and that Thor forced Loki to have a golden headpiece made for Sif, resulting in not only Sif's golden tresses but also five other objects for other gods.

In the God of War Series

God of War (2018)

Though Sif does not appear, when Kratos and Atreus reach Jötunheim, Brok mentions her name and describes her soft and perfect sloshers.

Powers and Abilities

  • Immortality: as a Norse God, Sif is immortal. Only a sufficiently powerful weapon or an extremely powerful being can kill her.

Trivia

  • Her Greek equivalents (in terms of being wife to Thor, the God of Thunder) are Hera and (in terms of being the Goddess of the Harvest and Fertility) Demeter.