Everything about Norwegian Language totally explained
Norwegian (
Norsk) is a
North Germanic language spoken primarily in
Norway, where it's an official language. Together with
Swedish and
Danish, Norwegian forms a
continuum of more or less
mutually intelligible local and regional variants
(see Danish language#Classification).
These continental Scandinavian languages together with the insular languages
Faroese and
Icelandic, as well as some extinct languages, constitute the
North Germanic languages (also called
Scandinavian languages). Faroese and Icelandic are no longer mutually intelligible with Norwegian in their spoken form, because continental Scandinavian has diverged from them.
As established by law and governmental policy, there are two official forms of
written Norwegian —
Bokmål (literally "book language") and
Nynorsk (literally "new Norwegian"). The
Norwegian Language Council recommends the terms "Norwegian Bokmål" and "Norwegian Nynorsk" in English.
There is no officially sanctioned standard of spoken Norwegian, but the
sociolect of the urban upper and middle class in East Norway, upon which Bokmål is primarily based, is the form generally taught to foreign students. This so-called
Standard Østnorsk (Standard East Norwegian) can be regarded as a
de facto spoken standard for Bokmål.
From the
16th to the
19th centuries, Danish was the standard written language of Norway. As a result, the development of modern written Norwegian has been subject to strong controversy related to
nationalism, rural versus urban discourse, and Norway's literary history. Historically, Bokmål is a Norwegianized variety of Danish, while Nynorsk is a language form based on Norwegian dialects and
puristic opposition to Danish. The now abandoned official policy to merge Bokmål and Nynorsk into one common language called
Samnorsk through a series of spelling reforms has created a wide spectrum of varieties of both Bokmål and Nynorsk. The unofficial form known as
Riksmål is considered more conservative than Bokmål, and the unofficial
Høgnorsk more conservative than Nynorsk.
Norwegians are educated in both Bokmål and Nynorsk. A 2005 poll indicates that 86.3% use primarily Bokmål as their daily written language, 5.5% use both Bokmål and Nynorsk, and 7.5% use primarily Nynorsk. Thus only 13% are frequently writing Nynorsk, although the majority speak dialects that resemble Nynorsk more closely than Bokmål. Broadly speaking, Bokmål and Riksmål are more commonly seen in urban and suburban areas; Nynorsk is seen in rural areas, particularly in Western Norway. The
Norwegian broadcasting corporation (NRK) broadcasts in both Bokmål and Nynorsk, and all governmental agencies are required to support both written languages. Bokmål is used in 92% of all written publications, Nynorsk in 8% (2000). In spite of concern that Norwegian dialects would eventually give way to a common, spoken, Norwegian language close to Bokmål, dialects find significant support in local environments, popular opinion, and public policy.
Norwegian is one of the working languages of the
Nordic Council. Under the
Nordic Language Convention, citizens of the
Nordic countries speaking Norwegian have the opportunity to use their native language when interacting with official bodies in other Nordic countries without being liable to any
interpretation or
translation costs.
History
Old Norse to distinct Scandinavian languages
The languages now spoken in Scandinavia developed from the
Old Norse language, which didn't differ greatly between what are now Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish areas. In fact,
Viking traders spread the language across
Europe and into
Russia, making Old Norse one of the most widespread languages for a time. According to tradition, King
Harald Fairhair united Norway in
872. Around this time, a
runic alphabet was used. According to writings found on stone tablets from this period of history, the language showed remarkably little deviation between different regions. Runes had been in limited use since at least the
3rd century. Around
1030,
Christianity came to Norway, bringing with it the
Latin alphabet. Norwegian manuscripts in the new alphabet began to appear about a century later. The Norwegian language began to deviate from its neighbors around this time as well.
Viking explorers had begun to settle
Iceland in the
9th century, carrying with them the Old Norse language. Over time, Old Norse developed into "Western" and "Eastern" variants. Western Norse covered Norway (including its overseas settlements in Iceland, Greenland, the Faroe Islands and the Shetland Islands), while Eastern Norse developed in
Denmark and south-central
Sweden. The languages of Iceland and Norway remained very similar until about the year
1300, when they became what are now known as
Old Icelandic and
Old Norwegian.
In the period traditionally dated to
1350–
1525, Norwegian went through a
Middle Norwegian transition toward
Modern Norwegian. The major changes were simplification of the morphology, a more fixed syntax, and a considerable adoption of
Middle Low German vocabulary. Similar development happened in Swedish and Danish, keeping the
dialect continuum in continental Scandinavia intact. This did not, however, happen in
Faroese and
Icelandic, so these languages lost mutual intelligibility with continental Scandinavia during this period.
Danish and Swedish rule
In
1397, the
Kalmar Union unified Norway, Sweden and Denmark, and from 1536 Norway was subordinated under the Kingdom of
Denmark–Norway. Danish became the commonly written language among Norway's literate class. Spoken Danish was gradually adopted by the urban elite, first at formal occasions, and gradually a more relaxed variety was adopted in everyday speech. The everyday speech went through a
koinéization process, involving grammatical simplification and Norwegianized pronunciation. When the union ended in
1814 the
Dano-Norwegian koiné had become the
mother tongue of a substantial part of the Norwegian élite, but the more Danish-sounding solemn variety was still used on formal occasions.
Norway was forced to enter a new personal union with Sweden, shortly after the end of the former one with Denmark. However, Norwegians began to push for true independence by embracing
democracy and attempting to enforce the constitutional declaration of being a sovereign state. Part of this nationalist movement was directed towards the development of an independent Norwegian language. Three major paths were available: do nothing (Norwegian written language, for example Danish, was already different from Swedish), Norwegianize the Danish language, or build a new national language based on Modern Norwegian dialects. All three approaches were attempted.
Danish to Norwegian
From the
1840s, some writers experimented with a Norwegianized Danish by incorporating words that were descriptive of Norwegian scenery and folk life, and adopting a more Norwegian syntax.
Knud Knudsen proposed to change spelling and inflection in accordance with the Dano-Norwegian koiné, known as "cultivated everyday speech." A small adjustment in this direction was implemented in the first official reform of Danish language in Norway in
1862 and more extensively after his death in two official reforms in
1907 and
1917.
Meanwhile, a nationalistic movement strove for the development of a new written Norwegian.
Ivar Aasen, a self-taught linguist, began his work to create a new Norwegian language at the age of 22. He traveled around the country, comparing the dialects in different regions, and examined the development of
Icelandic, which had largely escaped the influences Norwegian had come under. He called his work, which was published in several books from
1848 to
1873,
Landsmål, meaning national language. The name "Landsmål" is sometimes interpreted as "rural language" or "country language," but this was clearly not Aasen's intended meaning.
The name of the Danish language in Norway was a topic of hot dispute through the 19th century. Its proponents claimed that it was a language common to Norway and Denmark, and no more Danish than Norwegian. The proponents of Landsmål thought that the Danish character of the language shouldn't be concealed. In
1899,
Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson proposed the neutral name
Riksmål, meaning national language like Landsmål, and this was officially adopted along with the
1907 spelling reform. The name "Riksmål" is sometimes interpreted as "state language," but this meaning is secondary at best, compare to
Danish rigsmål from where the name was borrowed.
After the personal union with Sweden was dissolved in
1905, both languages were developed further and reached what is now considered their classic forms after a reform in 1917. Riksmål was in
1929 officially renamed
Bokmål (literally "Book language"), and Landsmål to
Nynorsk (literally "New Norwegian"). A proposition to substitute
Dano-Norwegian for
Bokmål lost in parliament by a single vote. The name
Nynorsk, the linguistic term for
Modern Norwegian, was chosen for contrast to Danish and emphasis on the historical connection to Old Norwegian. Today this meaning is often lost, and it's commonly mistaken as a "new" Norwegian in contrast to the "real" Norwegian Bokmål.
Bokmål and Nynorsk were made closer by a reform in
1938. This was a result of a state policy to merge Nynorsk and Bokmål into one language, called "Samnorsk" (Common Norwegian). A
1946 poll showed that this policy was supported by 79% of Norwegians at the time. However, opponents of the official policy still managed to create a massive protest movement against Samnorsk in the
1950s, fighting in particular the use of "radical" forms in Bokmål text books in schools. In the reform in
1959, the 1938 reform was partially reversed in Bokmål, but Nynorsk was changed further towards Bokmål. Since then Bokmål has reverted even further toward traditional Riksmål, while Nynorsk still adheres to the 1959 standard. Therefore a small minority of Nynorsk enthusiasts uses a more conservative standard called
Høgnorsk. The Samnorsk policy had little influence after
1960, and was officially abandoned in
2002.
Phonology
The sound system of Norwegian is similar to Swedish. There is considerable variation among the dialects, but the variant generally taught to foreign students is
Standard Østnorsk.
Consonants
Vowels
Standard Østnorsk>
| Orthography |
|
Description |
| a |
/ɑ/ |
Open back unrounded |
| ai |
/ɑɪ/ |
|
| au |
/æʉ/ |
|
| e (short) |
/ɛ/, /æ/ |
open mid front unrounded |
| e (long) |
/e/, /æ/ |
close-mid front unrounded |
| e (weak) |
/ə/ |
schwa (mid central unrounded) |
| ei |
/æɪ/, /ɛɪ/ |
|
| i (short) |
/ɪ/ |
close front unrounded |
| i (long) |
/i/ |
close front unrounded |
| o |
/u, o, ɔ/ |
close back rounded |
| oi |
/ɔʏ/ |
|
| u |
/ʉ/, /u/ |
close central rounded (close front extra rounded) |
| y (short) |
/ʏ/ |
close front rounded (close front less rounded) |
| y (long) |
/y/ |
close front rounded (close front less rounded) |
| æ |
/æ/, /ɛ/ |
near open front unrounded |
| ø |
/ø/ |
close-mid front rounded |
| øy |
/øʏ/ |
|
| å |
/ɔ/ |
open-mid back rounded |
Accent
Norwegian is a
pitch accent language with two distinct pitch patterns. They are used to differentiate two-syllable words with otherwise identical pronunciation. For example in many East Norwegian dialects, the word "" (farmers) is pronounced using tone 1, while "" (beans or prayers) uses tone 2, just like in Danish. Though the difference in spelling occasionally allow the words to be distinguished in written language, in most cases the minimal pairs are written alike, since written Norwegian has no explicit accent marks. In most eastern low-tone dialects, accent 1 uses a low flat pitch in the first syllable, while accent 2 uses a high, sharply falling pitch in the first syllable and a low pitch in the beginning of the second syllable. In both accents, these pitch movements are followed by a rise of
intonational nature (phrase accent), the size (and presence) of which signals emphasis/focus and which corresponds in function to the normal accent in languages that lack
lexical tone, such as English. That rise culminates in the final syllable of an accentual phrase, while the utterance-final fall that's so common in most languages is either very small or absent.
There are significant variations in pitch accent between dialects. Thus, in most of western and northern Norway (the so-called high-pitch dialects) accent 1 is falling, while accent 2 is rising in the first syllable and falling in the second syllable or somewhere around the syllable boundary. The pitch accents (as well as the peculiar phrase accent in the low-tone dialects) give the Norwegian language a "singing" quality which makes it fairly easy to distinguish from other languages.
Interestingly, accent 1 generally occurs in words that were monosyllabic in
Old Norse, and accent 2 in words that were polysyllabic.
Written language
Alphabet
The Norwegian alphabet has 29 letters.
A
| B |
C |
D |
E |
F |
G |
H |
I |
J |
K |
L |
M |
N |
O |
P |
Q |
R |
S |
T |
U |
V |
W |
X |
Y |
Z |
Æ |
Ø |
Å |
loanwords. Some also spell their otherwise Norwegian family names using these letters.
Some letters may be modified by diacritics: é, è, ê, ó, ò, â, and ô. In Nynorsk, ì and ù and ỳ are occasionally seen as well. The diacritics are not compulsory, but may in a few cases distinguish between different meanings of the word, for example: for (for/to), fór (went), fòr (furrow) and fôr (fodder). Loanwords may be spelled with other diacritics, most notably ü, á and à.
Bokmål and Nynorsk
Like some other European countries, Norway has an official "advisory board" — Språkrådet (Norwegian Language Council) — that determines, after approval from the Ministry of Culture, official spelling, grammar, and vocabulary for the Norwegian language. The board's work has been subject to considerable controversy through the years, and much work lies ahead.
Both Nynorsk and Bokmål have a great variety of optional forms. The Bokmål that uses the forms that are close to Riksmål is called moderate or conservative, depending on one's viewpoint, while the Bokmål that uses the forms that are close to Nynorsk is called radical. Nynorsk has forms that are close to the original Landsmål and forms that are close to Bokmål.
Riksmål
Opponents of the spelling reforms aimed at bringing Bokmål closer to Nynorsk have retained the name Riksmål and employ spelling and grammar that predate the Samnorsk movement. Riksmål and conservative versions of Bokmål have been the de facto standard written language of Norway for most of the 20th century, being used by large newspapers, encyclopedias, and a significant proportion of the population of the capital Oslo, surrounding areas, and other urban areas, as well as much of the literary tradition. Since the reforms of 1981 and 2003 (effective in 2005), the official Bokmål can be adapted to be almost identical with modern Riksmål. The differences between written Riksmål and Bokmål are today comparable to American and British English differences.
Riksmål is regulated by the Norwegian Academy, which determines acceptable spelling, grammar, and vocabulary.
Høgnorsk
There is also an unofficial form of Nynorsk, called Høgnorsk, discarding the post-1917 reforms, and thus close to Ivar Aasen's original Landsmål. It is supported by Ivar Aasen-sambandet, but has found no widespread use.
Current usage
About 86.2% of the pupils in the primary and lower secondary schools in Norway receive education in Bokmål, while about 13.8% receive education in Nynorsk. From the eighth grade onwards pupils are required to learn both. Out of the 431 municipalities in Norway, 161 have declared that they wish to communicate with the central authorities in Bokmål, 116 (representing 12% of the population) in Nynorsk, while 156 are neutral. Of 4,549 state publications in 2000 8% were in Nynorsk, and 92% in Bokmål. The large national newspapers (Aftenposten, Dagbladet and VG) are published in Bokmål. Some major regional newspapers (including Bergens Tidende and Stavanger Aftenblad), many political journals, and many local newspapers use both Bokmål and Nynorsk.
Dialects
There is general agreement that a wide range of differences makes it difficult to estimate the number of different Norwegian dialects. Variations in grammar, syntax, vocabulary, and pronunciation cut across geographical boundaries and can create a distinct dialect at the level of farm clusters. Dialects are in some cases so dissimilar as to be unintelligible to unfamiliar listeners. Many linguists note a trend toward regionalization of dialects that diminishes the differences at such local levels; there is, however, a renewed interest in preserving distinct dialects.
Examples
Below are a few sentences giving an indication of the differences between Bokmål and Nynorsk, compared to the conservative (nearer to Danish) form Riksmål, Danish, as well as Old Norse, Swedish, Faroese, Icelandic (the living language closest to Old Norse) and other modern Germanic languages:
| Language |
Phrase |
| I come from Norway |
What is his name? |
This is a horse |
The rainbow has many colours |
| Bokmål |
Jeg kommer fra Norge |
Hva heter han? |
Dette er en hest |
Regnbuen har mange farger |
| Riksmål |
Regnbuen har mange farver |
| Danish |
Hvad hedder han? |
| Nynorsk |
Eg kjem frå Noreg |
Kva heiter han? |
Dette er ein hest |
Regnbogen har mange fargar |
| Høgnorsk |
Regnbogen hev mange fargar Regnbogen er manglìta |
| Old Norse |
Ek kem frá Noregi |
Hvat heitir hann? |
Þetta er hross/hestr |
Regnboginn er marglitr |
| Icelandic |
Ég kem frá Noregi |
Hvað heitir hann? |
Þetta er hross/hestur |
Regnboginn er marglitur |
| Swedish |
Jag kommer från Norge |
Vad heter han? |
Detta är en häst |
Regnbågen har många färger |
| Faroese |
Eg eri úr Noregi |
Hvussu eitur hann? |
Hetta er eitt ross/ein hestur |
Ælabogin hevur nógvar litir |
| German |
Ich komme aus Norwegen |
Wie heißt er? |
Das ist ein Hengst/Roß/Pferd |
Der Regenbogen hat viele Farben |
| Dutch |
Ik kom uit Noorwegen |
Hoe heet hij? |
Dit is een paard |
De regenboog heeft veel kleuren |
| Afrikaans |
Ek kom van Noorweë |
Wat is sy naam? |
Dit is 'n perd |
Die reënboog het baie kleure |
Morphology
Nouns
Norwegian nouns are inflected or declined in definiteness (indefinite/definite) and number (singular/plural). In some dialects, definite nouns are furthermore declined in case (nominative/dative).
As in most Indo-European languages (English language being one of a few exceptions), nouns are classified by gender, which has consequences for the declension of agreeing adjectives and determiners. Norwegian dialects have three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter, except the Bergen dialect which has only two genders: common and neuter. Bokmål and Standard Østnorsk traditionally have two genders like Danish (and the Bergen dialect), but so called radical varieties have three genders. The two-gender form is now mostly replaced by the three-gender form in spoken Standard Østnorsk, but it's sometimes used in conservative Bokmål.
båt (boat) in Bokmål>
| Singular |
Plural |
| Indefinite |
Definite |
Indefinite |
Definite |
| en båt |
båten |
båter |
båtene |
The declension of regular nouns depends on gender. Some dialects and variants of Nynorsk furthermore have different declension of weak and strong feminines and neuters.
| m. | en gutt (a boy) |
gutten (the boy) |
gutter (boys) |
guttene (the boys)
|
| f. | ei/en dør (a door) |
døra/døren (the door) |
dører (doors) |
dørene (the doors)
|
| n. | et hus (a house) |
huset (the house) |
hus (houses) |
husene/husa (the houses)
|
As of July 1st 2005, all feminine nouns can be written as masculine nouns.
| m. | ein gut (a boy) |
guten (the boy) |
gutar (boys) |
gutane (the boys)
|
| f. | ei sol (a sun) |
sola/soli (the sun) |
soler (suns) |
solene (the suns)
|
ei kyrkje/kyrkja (a church) |
kyrkja (the church) |
kyrkjer/kyrkjor (churches) |
kyrkjene/kyrkjone (the churches) |
| n. | eit hus (a house) |
huset (the house) |
hus (houses) |
husa/husi (the houses)
|
eit hjarta/hjarte (a heart) |
hjarta/hjartet (the heart) |
hjarto/hjarte (hearts) |
hjarto/hjarta (the hearts) |
Adjectives
Norwegian adjectives have two inflectional paradigms. The weak inflection is applicable when the argument is definite, the strong inflection is used when the argument is indefinite. In both paradigms the adjective is declined in comparison (positive/comparative/superlative). Strong, positive adjectives are furthermore declined in gender and number in agreement with their argument. In some southwestern dialects, the weak positive is also declined in gender and number, with one form for feminine and plural, and one form for masculine and neuter.
Verbs
Norwegian finite verbs are inflected or conjugated in mood: indicative/imperative/subjunctive. The subjunctive mood is constrained to a handful of verbs. The indicative verbs are conjugated in tense, present / past. In Bokmål and Standard Østnorsk, the present tense also has a passive form. In a few dialects, indicative verbs are also conjugated in number. Conjugation in gender is lost in Norwegian.
There are four non-finite verb forms: infinitive, passive infinitive, and the two participles perfective/past participle and imperfective/present participle.
The participles are verbal adjectives. The imperfective participle has no further declension, but the perfective participle is declined in gender (not in Bokmål and Standard Østnorsk) and number like strong, positive adjectives. The definite form of the participle is identical to the plural form.
As with other Germanic languages, Norwegian verbs can be either weak or strong.
Pronouns
Norwegian personal pronouns are declined in case, nominative / accusative. Some of the dialects that have preserved the dative in nouns, also have a dative case instead of the accusative case in personal pronouns, while others have accusative in pronouns and dative in nouns, effectively giving these dialects three distinct cases.
In the most comprehensive Norwegian grammar, Norsk referansegrammatikk, the categorization of personal pronouns by person, gender, and number isn't regarded as inflection. As with nouns, adjectives must agree with the gender and number of pronoun arguments.
Other pronouns have no inflection.
The so called possessive, demonstrative and relative pronouns are no longer regarded to be pronouns.
Pronouns are a closed class.
>
| Nominative |
Accusative |
English equivalent |
| jeg |
meg |
I, me |
| du |
deg |
you (singular) |
| han |
ham/han |
he, him |
| hun |
henne |
she, her |
| den |
den |
it (masculine/feminine) |
| det |
det |
it (neuter) |
| vi |
oss |
we, us |
| dere |
dere |
you (plural) |
| de |
dem |
they, them |
>
| Nominative |
Accusative |
English equivalent |
| eg |
meg |
I, me |
| du |
deg |
you (singular) |
| han |
han/honom |
he, him or it (masculine) |
| ho |
ho/henne |
she, her or it (feminine) |
| det |
det |
it (neuter) |
| me/vi |
oss |
we, us |
| de |
dykk |
you (plural) |
| dei |
dei |
they, them |
Bokmål, like English, has two sets of 3rd person pronouns. Han and hun refer to male and female individuals respectively, den and det refer to impersonal or inanimate nouns, of masculine/feminine or neutral gender respectively. In contrast, Nynorsk and most dialects use the same set of pronouns (han (m.), ho (f.) and det (n.)) for both personal and impersonal references. Det also has expletive and cataphoric uses like in the English examples it rains and it was known by everyone (that) he'd travelled the world.
Determiners
The closed class of Norwegian determiners are declined in gender and number in agreement with their argument. Not all determiners are inflected.
eigen (own) in Nynorsk>
| Masculine |
Feminine |
Neuter |
Plural |
| eigen |
eiga |
eige |
eigne |
Particle classes
Norwegian has five closed classes without inflection, for example lexical categories with grammatical function and a finite number of members that may not be distinguished by morphological criteria. These are interjections, conjunctions, subjunctions, prepositions, and adverbs. The inclusion of adverbs here requires that traditional adverbs that are inflected in comparison be classified as adjectives, as is sometimes done.
Compound words
In Norwegian compound words, the head, for example the part determining the compound's class, is the last part. Only the first part has primary stress. For instance, the compund tenketank (think tank) has primary stress on the first syllable and is a noun (some sort of tank).
Compound words are written together in Norwegian, which can cause words to become very long, for example sannsynlighetsmaksimeringsestimator (maximum likelihood estimator) and menneskerettighetsorganisasjoner (human rights organisations). Another example is the title høyesterettsjustitiarius (originally a combination of supreme court and the actual title, justiciar). Note also the translation En midtsommernattsdrøm (A Midsummer Night's Dream).
If they're not written together, each part will naturally be read with primary stress, and the meaning of the compound is lost. This is sometimes forgotten, occasionally with humorous results. Instead of writing, for example, lammekoteletter (lamb chops), people make the mistake of writing lamme koteletter (lame, or paralyzed, chops). The original message can even be reversed, as when røykfritt (no smoking, for example "smoke free") becomes røyk fritt (smoke freely).
Other examples include:
- Terrasse dør ("Terrace dies") instead of Terrassedør ("Terrace door")
- Tunfisk biter ("Tuna bites", verb) instead of Tunfiskbiter ("Tuna bits", noun)
- Smult ringer ("Lard is calling", verb) instead of Smultringer ("Doughnuts")
- Tyveri sikret ("Theft guaranteed") instead of Tyverisikret ("Theft proof")
- Stekt kylling lever ("Fried chicken lives", verb) instead of Stekt kyllinglever ("Fried chicken liver", noun)
- Pult ost ("Fucked cheese") instead of Pultost ("Soft cheese")
- Smør brød ("Butter bread") instead of Smørbrød ("Sandwich")
- Klipp fisk ("Cut fish", verb) instead of Klippfisk ("Clipfish")
These misunderstandings occur because most nouns can be interpreted as verbs or other types of words.
Similar misunderstandings can be achieved in English too. The following are examples of phrases that both in Norwegian and English mean one thing as a compound word, and something different when regarded as separate words:
- stavekontroll (spellchecker) or stave kontroll (spell c-h-e-c-k-e-r)
- kokebok (cookbook) or koke bok (cooking a book)
- ekte håndlagde vafler (real handmade waffles) or Ekte hånd lagde vafler. (a real hand made some waffles.)
Vocabulary
By far the largest part of the modern vocabulary of Norwegian dates back to Old Norse. The largest source of loanwords is Middle Low German, which had a huge influence on Norwegian vocabulary from the late Middle Ages onwards partially even influencing grammatical structures, such as genitive constructions. At present, the main source of new loanwords is English for example rapper, e-mail, catering, juice, bag (originally a loan word to English from Old Norse). Norwegian is however considered to be less influenced by English than for instance Swedish or particularly Danish.
Some loanwords have their spelling changed to reflect Norwegian pronunciation rules, but in general Norwegianised spellings of these words tend to take a long time to sink in: for example sjåfør (from French chauffeur) and revansj (from French revanche) are now the common Norwegian spellings, but juice is more often used than the Norwegianised form jus, catering more often than keitering, service more often than sørvis, etc.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Norwegian Language'.
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