Old Norse
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Old Norse was a language spoken in Scandinavia and in places where Norse people settled. It was used during the Viking Age and the early Middle Ages, from about the 8th to the 14th centuries.
Old Norse is the name for the old Scandinavian dialects that came from Proto-Norse and later changed into modern languages like Icelandic, Faroese, Norwegian, Danish, and Swedish.
We learn about Old Norse from runic inscriptions written with the Younger Futhark and from many books written with the Latin alphabet. These writings include the Poetic Edda, the Prose Edda, the Icelandic sagas, skaldic verse, laws, and religious texts. Old Norse speakers met people who spoke other languages, especially Old English and the Celtic languages. This mixing gave us some English words we still use today, like egg, knife, sky, and window.
Scholars study Old Norse using texts from the 11th to the 14th centuries. The exact start and end of this period can differ, depending on what they are studying.
Geographical distribution
Old Icelandic was very similar to Old Norwegian, and together they made up Old West Norse. People spoke this language in places where Norse people settled, like Greenland, the Faroes, Ireland, Scotland, the Isle of Man, parts of northwest England, and Normandy. Old East Norse was spoken in Denmark, Sweden, Kievan Rus', and in Danish settlements in Normandy. The Old Gutnish dialect was used in Gotland.
By the 11th century, Old Norse was one of the most common European languages, spoken from Vinland in the west all the way to the Volga River in the east. In Kievan Rus', the language stayed in use the longest in Veliky Novgorod. Swedish speakers had settled in Finland by the 13th century.
Modern descendants
Main article: North Germanic languages
Old Norse changed into several languages we use today. Icelandic, Faroese, and Norwegian come from Old West Norse. Danish, Swedish, and Övdalian come from Old East Norse. Icelandic and Faroese still keep much of their old grammar, even though how they sound has changed. Norwegian now sounds more like Danish and Swedish.
Many English words, especially in northern areas and Scottish dialects, came from Old Norse. Norman French, and then modern French, were also influenced by Norse. Icelandic speakers can still read Old Norse texts, even though how they say the words has changed. Faroese has been affected by Danish, Norwegian, and Gaelic. Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian speakers can often understand each other without studying, because their languages are still quite similar.
Other languages, like Finnish, Estonian, Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Irish, and Scottish Gaelic, have also borrowed words from Norse, often about fishing and sailing.
Phonology
Old Norse had vowel sounds that came in long and short pairs. Long vowels were marked with an accent. There were special nasal sounds for all ten vowels.
Old Norse included three special sound combinations called diphthongs: /ɛi/, /ɔu/, and /øy ~ ɛy/. In East Norse, these changed, but in West Norse they stayed the same.
The language had six stop consonant sounds. The /d/ and /b/ sounds were often soft between vowels. The /ɡ/ sound was hard after /n/ or another /ɡ/, and soft before /s/ and /t/.
Old Norse used stress mainly on the first syllable of a word. This pattern continued in modern Icelandic and Faroese. Primary stress was always on the word stem.
The open or open-mid vowels can be written in different ways:
- /æ/ = /ɛ/
- /ɒ/ = /ɔ/
- /ɑ/ = /a/
Around the 13th century, /ɔ/ merged with /ø/ or /o/ in most dialects except Old Danish and Icelandic, where it merged with /ø/. Nasal vowels were noted in old writings but likely disappeared in most dialects by this time, though they remain in Elfdalian and other Ovansiljan dialects.
Old Norse had three diphthong sounds: /ɛi/, /ɔu/, and /øy ~ ɛy/. In East Norse, these changed into single vowel sounds, but in West Norse they stayed as diphthongs.
Old Norse had six plosive sounds. The /d/ and /b/ sounds were often soft between vowels. The /ɡ/ sound was hard after /n/ or another /ɡ/, and soft before /s/ and /t/. The Old East Norse /ʀ/ sound was a special tongue-tip consonant, possibly a palatal sibilant.
The sound of ⟨hv⟩ is not fully known, but it may have been like [xʷ], [hʷ], or [ʍ]. In Icelandic, it changed into a strong plosive [kv].
| Proto-Germanic | Northwest Germanic | Primitive Old West Norse | Old Icelandic (1st Grammarian) | Later Old Icelandic | Example (Old Norse) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| *a *[ɑ] | *a | a ; ⟨a⟩ | a | a | land 'land' landą |
| *a (+i-mut) | ɛ ; ⟨ę⟩ | e ; ⟨e⟩ | e | menn 'men' manniz | |
| *a (+u/w-mut) | ɔ ; ⟨ǫ⟩ | ɔ | ø ; ⟨ö⟩ | lǫnd 'lands' landu landō ; sǫngr 'song' sǫngr sangwaz | |
| *a (+i-mut +w-mut) | œ ; ⟨ø₂⟩ | ø | ø ; ⟨ö⟩ | gøra 'to make' garwijaną | |
| *ē *[æː] | *aː | aː ; ⟨á⟩ | aː | aː | láta 'to let' lētaną |
| *aː (+i-mut) | ɛː ; ⟨æ⟩ | ɛː | ɛː | mæla 'to speak' mālijan mēlijaną | |
| *aː (+u-mut) | ɔː ; ⟨ǫ́⟩ | ɔː | aː ; ⟨á⟩ | mǫ́l 'meals' mālu mēlō | |
| *e | *e | e ; ⟨e⟩ | e | e | sex 'six' seks ; bresta 'to burst' brestaną |
| *e (+u/w-mut) | ø ; ⟨ø₁⟩ | ø | ø ; ⟨ö⟩ | tøgr 'ten' teguz | |
| *e (broken) | ea ; ⟨ea⟩ | ja ; ⟨ja⟩ | ja | gjalda 'to repay' geldaną | |
| *e (broken + u/w-mut) | eo ~ io ; ⟨eo ~ io⟩ | jo > jɔ ; ⟨jǫ⟩ | jø ; ⟨jö⟩ | skjǫldr 'shield' skelduz | |
| *ē₂ *[eː] | *eː | eː ; ⟨é⟩ | eː | eː | lét 'to let pst' lē₂t |
| *i | *i | i ; ⟨i⟩ | i | i | mikill 'great' mikilaz |
| *i (+w-mut) | y ; ⟨y⟩ | y | y(ː) | slyngva 'to sling' slingwaną | |
| *ī | *iː | iː ; ⟨í⟩ | iː | iː | líta 'to look' lītaną |
| *ō [ɔː] /*ā *[ɑː] | *oː | oː ; ⟨ó⟩ | oː | oː | fór 'went' fōr ; mót 'meeting' mōtą |
| *oː (+i-mut) | øː ; ⟨œ⟩ | øː | ɛː ; ⟨æ⟩ | mœðr 'mothers' mōdriz | |
| *u | *u | u ; ⟨u⟩ | u | u | una 'to be content' unaną |
| *u (+i-mut) | y ; ⟨y⟩ | y | y | kyn 'race' kunją | |
| *u (+a-mut) | o ; ⟨o⟩ | o | o | fogl/fugl 'bird' fuglaz ; morginn 'morning' murganaz | |
| *ū | *uː | uː ; ⟨ú⟩ | uː | uː | drúpa 'to droop' drūpaną |
| *uː (+i-mut) | yː ; ⟨ý⟩ | yː | yː | mýss 'mice' mūsiz | |
| *ai *[ɑi̯] | *ai | ai > ɛi ; ⟨ei⟩ | ɛi | ɛi | bein, Gut. bain 'bone' bainą |
| *ai (+w-mut) | øy ; ⟨ey ~ øy⟩ | øy ; ⟨ey⟩ | ɛy | kveykva 'to kindle' kwaikwaną | |
| *au *[ɑu̯] | *au | au > ɔu ; ⟨au⟩ | ɔu | au | lauss 'loose' lausaz |
| *au (+i-mut) | øy ; ⟨ey ~ øy⟩ | øy ; ⟨ey⟩ | ɛy | leysa 'to loosen' lausijaną | |
| *eu | *eu | eu ; ⟨eu⟩ | juː ; ⟨jú⟩ | juː | djúpr 'deep' deupaz |
| *eu (+dental) | eo ; ⟨eo⟩ | joː ; ⟨jó⟩ | juː ; ⟨jú⟩ | bjóða/bjúða 'to offer' beudaną | |
| *V̨ | *Ṽ | Ṽ | Ṽ | V | komȧ kwemaną 'to come, arrive' ; OWN vėtr/vėttr vintr wintruz 'winter' |
| *V̨̄ | *Ṽː | Ṽː | Ṽː | Vː | hȧ́r 'shark' hanhaz ; ȯ́rar 'our' (pl.) unseraz ; ø̇́rȧ 'younger' (acc. neut. wk.) junhizą |
Orthography
Old Norse was written in two ways. First, it used the Younger Futhark, a set of 16 letters called runes. Because there were so few runes, one rune often stood for several different sounds. It did not show the difference between long and short vowel sounds. Later, Medieval runes were also used.
Second, Old Norse was written with the Latin alphabet. Back then, there was no one correct way to spell words. A special letter called vend, based on the letter wynn, was sometimes used for certain sounds. Long vowel sounds were sometimes marked with marks above the letters but were also sometimes left unmarked. Today, scholars use a special spelling system to write Old Norse words correctly.
Phonological processes
Ablaut
Ablaut patterns are groups of vowels that switch places in the middle of a word. Strong verbs change the middle vowel to show past tense, similar to how English verbs like "sing" become "sang" in the past.
Umlaut
Umlaut is a change in a vowel because of a vowel or special sound that comes after it. This change can be important for showing grammar rules. It can turn some vowels into others, like turning "a" into "ö" in certain words.
Breaking
Vowel breaking splits a front vowel into two sounds before a back vowel in the next part of the word. West Norse only changed the vowel "e", while East Norse also changed "i". Certain letters like "w", "l", or "r" can stop this change.
Assimilation or elision of inflectional ʀ
When a word ends in certain letters and has a long vowel, a special ending sound can change or disappear. For example, the verb "to blow" becomes "blæss" instead of a longer form. Some words keep their special endings even when rules say they should change.
Phonotactics
Blocking of ii, uu
In Old Norse, some sounds could not be used next to each other. For example, the sound i could not come right after i or e. This meant that at the start of words, some sounds were left out. The word for "wolf" in Old Norse was úlfr, which looks like the English word "wolf".
Epenthesis
Over time, people in Scandinavia began adding extra, quiet vowels to words to make them easier to say. By around the year 1200, this change started in Denmark, and by 1300, it spread to Iceland. Different areas used different vowels. For example, in parts of Norway south of Bergen, people might say aftur, while in other areas, they said aftir or after.
Grammar
Old Norse was a language that changed words in many ways to show their meaning. Modern Icelandic still keeps many of these changes, especially for nouns. Modern Norwegian uses simpler word structures.
Old Norse had three types of grammatical genders – masculine, feminine, and neuter. Words that described nouns had to match the noun's gender. For example, one would say, "heill maðr!" but, "heilt barn!".
Nouns, adjectives, and pronouns changed form based on their role in a sentence. They had four cases – nominative, accusative, genitive, and dative – and could be singular or plural. Adjectives and pronouns also changed based on gender. Some pronouns could show pairs with a special form called dual number.
There were different groups of nouns, each with its own pattern of changes. Some nouns followed "strong" patterns, while others followed "weak" patterns with fewer forms. A definite article was added to nouns as a suffix later in the Old Norse period.
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| Nom | armr | armar |
| Acc | arm | arma |
| Gen | arms | |
| Dat | armi | ǫrmum / armum |
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| Nom-Acc | troll | |
| Gen | trolls | trolla |
| Dat | trolli | trollum |
Texts
The earliest writings in Old Norse are called runes. They date back to the 8th century. People used runes until the 15th century. Some places in Sweden used them as late as the 19th century.
When people in these lands started following Christianity in the 11th century, they began using the Latin alphabet. The oldest books written in Old Norse with this alphabet are from the middle of the 12th century.
After that, Old Norse was used to write many different kinds of stories and books. Most of these books were written in Iceland. The most famous are the Norse sagas and stories about Icelanders, along with myths. There were also many religious books, stories from other cultures, and the Old Testament. Other writings included instructions, grammar books, and letters and official papers.
Main article:
conversion to Christianity
Norse sagas
Icelanders' sagas
courtly romances
grammatical treatises
Dialects
Old Norse had many similar features across its dialects, so people thought of it as one language. Sometimes they called it the "Danish tongue" or the "Norse language." But there were some differences between the western and eastern parts of the language.
As Old Norse developed, changes happened across the whole area at first. Later, differences grew between the west and east, especially in how some sounds changed. For example, some words changed in Old West Norse but not in Old East Norse.
Old West Norse
Old West Norse is the best-known version of Old Norse. Often, when people talk about Old Norse, they mean Old West Norse. This version of the language changed in some ways around the 7th century.
Old West Norse kept some sounds that Old East Norse lost. The earliest texts in Old West Norse come from around the year 900 and include poems and legal documents. During the 12th and 13th centuries, areas like Trøndelag and Western Norway helped shape this version of the language.
Old Icelandic
In Iceland, some sounds changed in unique ways. For example, the sound "w" before certain letters disappeared. Icelandic also developed a special long sound for the letter "a" around the 11th century.
Old Norwegian
In Norway, some sounds like "hl," "hn," and "hr" simplified into "l," "n," and "r" around the 11th century. There were also some changes in how vowels sounded and were spelled.
Greenlandic Norse
This was a version of Old West Norse spoken in Greenland by Icelandic settlers. It disappeared around the 15th century.
Old East Norse
Old East Norse, also called Old East Nordic, was spoken in Sweden and Denmark between 800 and 1100. It was often written in runes. Over time, changes happened more in Denmark than in Sweden.
Swedish kept more of the older sounds compared to Danish. For example, the sound "w" lasted much longer in Swedish than in Danish.
Old Danish
In Denmark, some sounds changed earlier than in Sweden. For example, certain consonant sounds became voiced, and some vowels merged into a single sound.
Old Swedish
In Sweden, some sounds like "h" before "l," "n," and "r" were still present in the early days but later disappeared in most places.
Old Gutnish
Old Gutnish was spoken on the island of Gotland. Because of its isolation, it developed differently from both Old West and Old East Norse. For example, some sounds changed in ways that were unique to Gutnish.
| Digital facsimile of the manuscript text | The same text with normalized spelling | The same text with Modern Icelandic spelling |
|---|---|---|
[...] ſem oꝩın͛ h̅ſ brıgzloðo h̅o̅ epꞇ͛ þͥ ſe̅ ſıðaʀ mon ſagꞇ verða. Þeſſı ſveın̅ aͬ.* ꝩar ıſcola ſeꞇꞇr ſem ſıðꝩenıa e͛ ꞇıl rıkra man̅a vꞇan-lanꝺz aꞇ laꞇa g͛a vıð boꝛn̅ ſíıƞ́ Meıſꞇarı ꝩar h̅o̅ ꝼengın̅ ſa e͛ arıſꞇoꞇıleſ heꞇ. h̅ ꝩar harðla goðꝛ clercr ⁊ en̅ meſꞇı ſpekıngr aꞇ ꝩıꞇı. ⁊ er h̅ ꝩͬ.xíí. veꞇᷓ gamall aꞇ allꝺrı nalıga alroſcın̅ aꞇ ꝩıꞇı. en ſꞇoꝛhvgaðꝛ u̅ ꝼᷓm alla ſına ıaꝼnallꝺꝛa. | [...] sem óvinir hans brigzluðu honum eftir því, sem síðarr man sagt verða. þessi sveinn Alexander var í skóla settr, sem siðvenja er til ríkra manna útanlands at láta gera við bǫrn sín. meistari var honum fenginn sá, er Aristoteles hét. hann var harðla góðr klerkr ok inn mesti spekingr at viti. ok er hann var tólv vetra gamall at aldri, náliga alroskinn at viti, en stórhugaðr umfram alla sína jafnaldra, [...] | [...] sem óvinir hans brigsluðu honum eftir því, sem síðar mun sagt verða. Þessi sveinn Alexander var í skóla settur, sem siðvenja er til ríkra manna utanlands að láta gera við börn sín. Meistari var honum fenginn sá, er Aristóteles hét. Hann var harla góður klerkur og hinn mesti spekingur að viti og er hann var tólf vetra gamall að aldri, nálega alroskinn að viti, en stórhugaður umfram alla sína jafnaldra, [...] |
Relationship to other languages
Relationship to English
See also: History of English § Scandinavian influence, and List of English words of Old Norse origin
Old English and Old Norse were related languages. Because of this, many Old Norse words sound familiar to English speakers today. Words like armr meaning 'arm' and fótr meaning 'foot' come from a shared Proto-Germanic language that both English and Old Norse came from.
During the Viking Age, many everyday Old Norse words entered the Old English language. For example, words like "egg," "law," "leg," "sky," and "window" all came from Old Norse. These words became a big part of everyday English and are still used today.
In a sentence like "They are both weak," we can see Old Norse words clearly. The words "they" and "weak" both came from Old Norse. Even the word "both" might also have come from Old Norse, though this is not completely certain. While not as many words came from Old Norse as from Norman French or Latin, these words are very important because they are part of the core of modern English vocabulary.
Relationship to modern Scandinavian languages
| Old Norse | Modern Icelandic | Modern Faroese | Modern Swedish | Modern Danish | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a ⟨a⟩ | a(ː) | a/ɛaː ; ɛ ⟨a⟩ (+ng, nk) | a/ɑː ⟨a⟩ ; ɔ/oː ⟨å⟩ (+ld, rd, ng) | ⟨a⟩ ; ɔ/ɔː ⟨å⟩ (+rd) | ON land 'land': Ic/Fa/Sw/Da/No land ; ON dagr 'day': Ic/Fa dagur, Sw/Da/No dag; ON harðr 'hard': Ic/Fa harður, Sw/Da hård, No hard ; ON langr 'long': Ic/Fa langur, Sw lång, Da/No lang |
| ja ⟨ja⟩ | ja(ː) | ja/jɛaː | (j)ɛ(ː) ⟨(j)ä⟩ | jɛ: ⟨jæ⟩ ; jæ: ⟨je⟩ (+r) | ON hjalpa 'to help': Ic/Fa hjálpa, Sw hjälpa, Da hjælpe, No hjelpe, NN hjelpa ; ON hjarta 'heart': Ic/Fa hjarta, Sw hjärta, Da/NB hjerte, NN hjarta/hjarte |
| aː ⟨á⟩ | au(ː) | ɔ/ɔaː | ɔ/oː ⟨å⟩ | ɔ/ɒ: ⟨å⟩ | ON láta 'to let': Ic/Fa láta, Sw låta, Da lade, No la |
| ɛː ⟨æ⟩ | ai(ː) | a/ɛaː | ɛ(ː) ⟨ä⟩ | ON mæla 'to speak': Ic/Fa/NN mæla, Sw mäla, No mæle ; ON sæll 'happy': Ic sæll, Fa sælur, Sw säll, Da/No sæl | |
| e ⟨e⟩ | ɛ(ː) | ɛ/eː | ON menn 'men': Ic/Fa menn, Sw män, Da mænd, No menn ; ON bera 'to bear': Ic/Fa bera, Sw bära, Da/NB bære, NN bera/bere ; ON vegr 'way': Ic/Fa vegur, Sw väg, Da vej, No vej/ veg | ||
| eː ⟨é⟩ | jɛ(ː) | a/ɛaː ⟨æ⟩ | ON kné 'knee': Ic hné, Fa/Da knæ, Sw knä, No kne | ||
| i ⟨i⟩ | ɪ(ː) | ɪ/iː | ɪ/iː ⟨i⟩ | e ⟨i⟩/ eː ⟨e⟩ | ON kinn "cheek": Ic/Fa/No kinn, Sw/Da kind |
| iː ⟨í⟩ | i(ː) | ʊɪ(ː) ʊt͡ʃː ⟨íggj⟩ | ⟨i⟩ | ON tíð 'time': Ic/Fa tíð, Sw/Da/No tid | |
| ɔ ⟨ǫ⟩ | ø > œ(ː) ⟨ö⟩ | œ/øː ⟨ø⟩ ɔ/oː ⟨o⟩ | ⟨a⟩ ; ⟨o⟩ ; ⟨ø⟩ (+r) ; ⟨å⟩ (+ld, rd, ng) | ON hǫnd' 'hand': Ic hönd, Fa hond, Sw/NN hand, Da/NB hånd ; ON nǫs 'nose': Ic nös, Fa nøs, Sw/NN nos, Da næse, NB nese, NN nase ; ON ǫrn 'eagle': Ic/Sw örn, Fa/Da/No ørn ; ON sǫngr 'song': Ic söngur, Fa songur, Sw sång, Da/NB sang, NN song | |
| jɔ ⟨jǫ⟩ | jø > jœ(ː) ⟨jö⟩ | jœ/jøː ⟨jø⟩ | (j)œ/(j)øː ⟨(j)ö⟩ | ON skjǫldr 'shield': Ic skjöldur', Fa skjøldur, Sw sköld, Da/No skjold ; ON bjǫrn 'bear': Ic/Sw björn, Fa/Da/NN bjørn | |
| ɔː ⟨ǫ́⟩ | aː > au(ː) ⟨á⟩ | ɔ/ɔaː ⟨á⟩ œ/ɔuː ⟨ó⟩ | ɔ/oː ⟨å⟩ | ⟨å⟩ | ON tá (*tǫ́) 'toe': Ic/Fa tá, Sw/Da/No tå |
| o ⟨o⟩ | ɔ(ː) | ɔ/oː | ɔ/oː ⟨o⟩ | ON morginn/morgunn 'morning': Ic morgunn, Fa morgun, Sw/NN morgon, Da/NB morgen | |
| oː ⟨ó⟩ | ou(ː) | œ/ɔuː ɛkv ⟨ógv⟩ | ʊ/uː ⟨o⟩ | ⟨o⟩ | ON bók 'book': Ic/Fa bók, Sw/No bok, Da bog |
| u ⟨u⟩ | ʏ(ː) | ʊ/uː | ɵ/ʉː ⟨u⟩ | ON fullr 'full': Ic/Fa fullur, Sw/Da/No full | |
| uː ⟨ú⟩ | u(ː) | ʏ/ʉuː ɪkv ⟨úgv⟩ | ⟨u⟩ | ON hús 'house': Ic/Fa hús, Sw/Da/No hus | |
| joː ⟨jó⟩ | jou(ː) | jœ/jɔuː (j)ɛkv ⟨(j)ógv⟩ | jɵ/jʉː ⟨ju⟩ | ⟨y⟩ | ON bjóða 'to offer, command': Ic/Fa bjóða, Sw bjuda, Da/No byde, NN byda, No by |
| juː ⟨jú⟩ | ju(ː) | jʏ/jʉuː (j)ɪkv ⟨(j)úgv⟩ | ON djúpr 'deep': Ic/Fa djúpur, Sw/No djup, Da dyb, NB dyp | ||
| ø ⟨ø⟩ | ø > œ(ː) ⟨ö⟩ | œ/øː ⟨ø⟩ | œ/øː ⟨ö⟩ | ON gøra 'to prepare': Sw göra | |
| øː ⟨œ⟩ | ɛː > ai(ː) ⟨æ⟩ | ⟨ø⟩ | ON grœnn 'green': Ic grænn, Fa grønur, Sw grön, Da/NN grøn, No grønn | ||
| y ⟨y⟩ | ɪ(ː) | ɪ/iː | ⟨ö⟩, ⟨y⟩ | ON dyrr 'door': Ic/Fa dyr, Sw dörr, Da/No dør ON fylla 'to fill': Ic/Fa/NN/Sw fylla, Da fylde, No fylle | |
| yː ⟨ý⟩ | i(ː) | ʊɪ(ː) ʊt͡ʃː ⟨ýggj⟩ | ʏ/yː ⟨y⟩ | ⟨y⟩ | ON dýrr 'dear': Ic dýr, Fa dýrur, Sw/Da/No dyr |
| ɛi ⟨ei⟩ | ei(ː) | aɪ(ː) at͡ʃː ⟨eiggj⟩ | e(ː) ⟨e⟩ | ⟨e⟩ | ON steinn 'stone': Ic steinn, Fa steinur, Sw/Da/NB sten, No stein |
| œy ⟨ey⟩ | ei(ː) | ɔɪ(ː) ⟨oy⟩ ɔt͡ʃː ⟨oyggj⟩ | œ/øː ⟨ö⟩ | ⟨ø⟩ | ON ey 'island': Ic ey, Fa oyggj, Sw ö, Da ø, No øy |
| ɔu ⟨au⟩ | øy(ː) | ɛ/ɛɪː ⟨ey⟩ ɛt͡ʃː ⟨eyggj⟩ | ON draumr 'dream': Ic draumur, Fa dreymur, Sw dröm, Da/NB drøm, NN draum |
| Spelling | Old Norse | Modern Icelandic | Modern Faroese | Modern Swedish | Modern Norwegian |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ⟨a⟩ | a | a(ː) | a/ɛaː | a/ɑː | ɑ(ː) |
| ⟨á⟩ | aː | au(ː) | ɔ/ɔaː | – | |
| ⟨ä⟩ | – | ɛ/ɛː | – | ||
| ⟨å⟩ | ɔ/oː | ||||
| ⟨æ⟩ | ɛː | ai(ː) | a/ɛaː | – | æ(ː) , ɛ/eː |
| ⟨e⟩ | e | ɛ(ː) | ɛ/eː | e/eː | ɛ/eː , ə, æ(ː) |
| ⟨é⟩ | eː | jɛ(ː) | – | ||
| ⟨i⟩ | i | ɪ(ː) | ɪ/iː | ||
| ⟨í⟩ | iː | i(ː) | ʊɪ(ː) | – | |
| ⟨o⟩ | o | ɔ(ː) | ɔ/oː | ʊ/uː , ɔ/oː | uː , ɔ/oː |
| ⟨ó⟩ | oː | ou(ː) | œ/ɔuː | – | |
| ⟨ǫ⟩ | ɔ | – | |||
| ⟨ǫ́⟩ | ɔː | ||||
| ⟨ö⟩ | – | ø > œ(ː) | – | œ/øː | – |
| ⟨ø⟩ | ø | – | œ/øː | – | œ/øː |
| ⟨œ⟩ | øː | – | |||
| ⟨u⟩ | u | ʏ(ː) | ʊ/uː | ɵ/ʉː | ʉ(ː) |
| ⟨ú⟩ | uː | u(ː) | ʏ/ʉuː | – | |
| ⟨y⟩ | y | ɪ(ː) | ɪ/iː | ʏ/yː | |
| ⟨ý⟩ | yː | i(ː) | ʊɪ(ː) | – | |
| ⟨ei⟩ | ɛi | ei(ː) | aɪ(ː) | – | æɪ |
| ⟨ey⟩ | œy | ei(ː) | ɛ/ɛɪː | – | |
| ⟨oy⟩ | – | ɔɪ(ː) | – | ||
| ⟨øy⟩ | – | œʏ | |||
| ⟨au⟩ | ɔu | øy(ː) | – | æʉ | |
Images
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Old Norse, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.
Safekipedia