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Norwegian translations
If you are looking for a translator from Norwegian or into
Norwegian, we are please to offer the service of our extensive
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Some facts about Norwegian language
Norwegian language, member of the North Germanic, or Scandinavian,
group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family
of languages. It is spoken by about 4 million people in Norway
and another million in the other Scandinavian countries and
North America. Norwegian is a daughter language of Old Norse.
Today there are two official forms of Norwegian: bokmal [book
language] and nynorsk [new Norwegian]. Bokmal, also called
riksmal [national language] and Dano-Norwegian, was greatly
influenced by Danish, which was the dominant language of officialdom
when Norway was under Danish rule (1397–1814). The language
of the cities, the official and professional classes, and
literature, bokmal came to differ greatly from the Norwegian
spoken by the common people. Since 1905, however, orthographical
and grammatical reforms by the government have brought bokmal
closer to the popular form of Norwegian. Nynorsk, also known
as landsmal [country language], stems from the native Norwegian
dialects that evolved from Old Norse (uninfluenced by Danish),
and it is therefore very different from bokmal. Developed
by Ivar Aasen, nynorsk was introduced by him in 1853 as part
of a nationalistic desire to have a purely Norwegian language
for the country. It is based on rural dialects and spoken
principally in rural areas. Both bokmal and nynorsk are employed
by the government, the schools, and the mass media, but bokmal
is by far the more widely used of the two, especially in education
and literature. Some efforts have been made to fuse the two
forms of Norwegian into one common Norwegian tongue called
samnorsk [common Norwegian], and there is hope that this can
be accomplished. Norwegian grammar is fairly simple. The form
of the noun is changed only to indicate possession and the
plural, and personal inflection of the verb has been discarded.
Like Swedish, Norwegian uses pitch accents, but to a lesser
degree. The pitch accents give the language a musical quality
and are sometimes employed to distinguish the meanings of
homonyms. Norwegian employs the Roman alphabet, which was
introduced in Norway in the 11th cent. and to which three
characters o, and a, have been added.
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