Norwegian language

(Redirected from Norweigian language)

The Norwegian language is the official language of Norway. It is spoken by over four and a half million people, and it belongs to the group of North Germanic languages which are spoken in Scandinavia. These include Swedish, Danish, Icelandic and Faeroese.

Norwegian
norsk
Pronunciation[nɔʂk] (East and North)
[nɔʁsk] (West)
Native to Norway
 Sweden
 Finland
 Russia
EthnicityNorwegians
Native speakers4.3 million  (2012)[1]
Language family
Early forms:
Standard forms
written Bokmål (official)
 • written Riksmål (unofficial)
written Nynorsk (official)
 • written Høgnorsk (unofficial)
Writing systemLatin (Norwegian alphabet)
Norwegian Braille
Official status
Official language in Norway
Flag of the Nordic Council.svg Nordic Council
Regulated byLanguage Council of Norway (Bokmål and Nynorsk)
Norwegian Academy (Riksmål)
Ivar Aasen-sambandet (Høgnorsk)
Language codes
ISO 639-1no – inclusive code

Individual codes:
nbBokmål

nnNynorsk
ISO 639-2nor
ISO 639-3norinclusive code
Individual codes:
nob – Bokmål
nno – Nynorsk
Linguasphere52-AAA-ba to -be;
52-AAA-cf to -cg
Norwegian Language.png
Areas where Norwegian is spoken, including North Dakota (where 0.4% of the population speaks Norwegian) and Minnesota (0.1% of the population) (Data: U.S. Census 2000).

Two forms of the language exist: bokmål (which means "book language") and nynorsk (which means "new Norwegian").

History of the Norwegian language

Old Norse

Old Norse is the language that was spoken hundreds of years ago in Scandinavia at the time of the Vikings. It is very similar to today’s Icelandic language. This is because many Vikings sailed from Norway to Iceland in order to escape from the rule of the Norwegian kings who were making people pay lots of tax.

Bokmål

During the 13th century the Black Death killed two thirds of the population of Norway. The Danish kings and queens noticed that Norway was weak and defenceless, so they annexed Norway (made it part of Denmark). For hundreds of years Norway was ruled by the Danes. All the rulers, priests, estate owners and noblemen were Danish. Many of them settled in Norway. This is why today’s standard Norwegian (Bokmål) is similar to Danish. Norwegians were not allowed to print books in Norwegian. Anyone wanting to study had to go to Denmark or Germany.

In 1814 Denmark lost a war and had to give Norway to Sweden. Then the Norwegians were allowed to have their own university. Gradually the Danish language was mixed up with the Norwegian dialects and became today’s Norwegian language. Norwegian and Danish look very similar when they are written, but when they are spoken they sound different. In Danish a lot of the sounds are swallowed.

Nynorsk

During the 19th century a slightly different form of Norwegian was made up by several people. This eventually became known as “Nynorsk.” It was based on old forms of Norwegian and dialects. During the 20th century some attempts were made to join Bokmål and Nynorsk into one language, but they did not succeed. Today about one person in nine or ten in Norway writes Nynorsk. Children in school have to learn both forms.

The Norwegian alphabet

The Norwegian alphabet has 29 letters. These are the same letters as the English alphabet plus three extra vowels: æ ø å

The letters c, q, w, x and z are only used for words that have been borrowed from other languages. However, c and w are more common that q, x, and z, even more common than the letter æ which is used even in original Norwegian words.[2]

Norwegian Language Media

References

  1. De Smedt, Koenraad; Lyse, Gunn Inger; Gjesdal, Anje Müller; Losnegaard, Gyri S. (2012). The Norwegian Language in the Digital Age. White Paper Series. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. p. 45. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-31389-9. ISBN 9783642313882. Norwegian is the common spoken and written language in Norway and is the native language of the vast majority of the Norwegian population (more than 90%) and has about 4,320,000 speakers at present.
  2. Alphabet and Character Frequency: Norwegian (Norsk). Stefan Trost. 2023.

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