I think it is
góða nótt
bonsoir à la lune
a long shirt...
Goodnight is a noun. It's the subject in the sentence, "Goodnight [to you]."
There are a number of old Europeans words from Old German, Gothic, Old Norse, Old English and others which referred to the area as a 'mirror' and a type of 'cloud' as a 'shadow' or something that has' covered or concealed' or best of all 'the upper regions'. The Old Norse word also referred to the sky as 'transparent skin'
The English noun Monday derived sometime before 1200 from monedæi, which itself developed from Old English (around 1000) mōnandæg and mōndæg (literally meaning "day of the moon"), which is cognate to the Old Norse mánadagr.
'Silfr' is how you say silver in Old Norse.
Týr's bradnr is how you would say 'Tyr's Blade' in Old Norse.
In Old Norse, the word for book is "bók."
James is translated to "Jakob" in Old Norse.
Asgard would be ''Ásgarðr'' in Norse.
In Old Norse, "peace be with you" can be translated as "fríðr sé með þér."
There are at least five ways to say 'people' in Old Norse. firar folk lio lyor thjoo
In Old Norse, the name Shaun would likely be spelled as "Sjónn" or "Sjónnr."
By mækir and hlíf is how you say 'By Sword and Shield'. There is no Old Norse words for 'and' and 'the'. You have to improvise.EDIT: Mækir eða hlíf.
In Old Norse, Chaos can be referred to as "Káos" or "Trú." However, the concept of Chaos may not have had a direct equivalent in Old Norse cosmology as in other mythologies.
faith-æriht
It's "Kappi"