It's written Øyvind and it is said something like "ØY-WIND" it's kinda hard to explain if you don't hace the Æ,Ø,Å in your alphabet
it is pronounced Singna. It is a Norwegian name
Smile. But in english you pronounce it like "smail", but in norwegian, you pronounce like "smile"
It's not really used in Norwegian, so I think we's pronounce it just like the americans. If it's a originally a Norwegian name it propably had another spelling then.
Meett
swoept
The Norwegian alphabet is the same as the English except the extra three last letters: Æ, Ø, Å. Your English name would be the same in Norwegian, and as almost all Norwegians speak English they could easily pronounce your name the same. However it would also be possible to pronounce your name in a Norwegian fashion, with respect to different letter pronunciation and stress. Although this would hard to explain in writing, even if I knew your name. 'My name' is 'mitt navn' but if you want to say 'my name is Joe' you would say 'jeg heter Joe'.
The Norwegian script is the same as English with the additional letters: Æ, Ø, Å. The name Laura would be spelled the same way, and as most of the population in Norway speak English, it would also be pronounced the same. One could of course intentionally pronounce the name in Norwegian, with respect to stress on syllables and such, but this would be near impossible to explain, let alone be understood by an non-speaker. I would suggest you type in the name: Laura on Google translator, from English to Norwegian, and press: "Listen" and see whether or not they will be able to pronounce it in a Norwegian fashion.
Firenze (Fee-ren-zeh)
"Bah" as in bar, but shorter, plus "keh"
I'm fairly sure that the Norwegian name Aagot, also spelled Ågot, is pronounced /ˈˈoːɡɔt/ in Norwegian. This is in the International Phonetic Alphabet, and I put ˈˈ to indicate that it has tone 2. Norwegian uses two tones and tone 2 is a falling tone in the Oslo pronunciation, but you probably don't have to worry too much about this if you just need to say the name in English. Norwegian vowels can't be replicated exactly in English, but a fair approximation in English would be 'OH-got'.
The Norwegian word for four spells 'fire' but its pronounced ' fee - rah ' you don't properly pronounce the ' h ' Thank You :)
It's kind of like Sub-Net .......... weird, I know