Old Norse refers to the language. Norse refers to the people.
NO. Turnip belongs to Brassicaceae (old name: family cruciferae). If you mean tulip (not turnip) then yes it belongs to family liliaceae.
Type in 'Old Norse' on google. They are multiple English to Old Norse dictionaries and they are FREE.
Swedish is a derivative of Old Norse, and their word for "Wolf" is "Ulv". Old Norse, as a language, seems to be extinct.
'Silfr' is how you say silver in Old Norse.
An Introduction to Old Norse was created in 1927.
Old Norse: Atla Meaning: "Fury"
The Vikings spoke a language called "Old Norse". Today, the main descendants of Old Norse are:IcelandicDanishNorwegianSwedishFaroeseToday, only Icelandic and Faroese retain a strong similarity to Old Norse.[Note: Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic are not related to Old Norse, but do have some influences from it.]
Old English belonged to the Germanic language family.
Carbon family
it belongs to the rodent family
An Introduction to Old Norse has 412 pages.