Sauna, for a start.
Sibylle Hug has written: 'Scandinavian loanwords and their equivalents in Middle English' -- subject(s): English language, Foreign words and phrases, Influence on English, Scandinavian, Scandinavian languages
It is of unknown Scandinavian origin.Middle English and Scandinavian
Germanic, Scandinavian, Anglo-Saxon, and Greek. Plus many other languages.
can be English(Anglo), Anglo-Scandinavian or Scandinavian in origin.
The Vikings spoke a language consisting of words now used in some Scandinavian countries.
These Scandinavian runes are quite inscrutable. I am prepared to forward the Scandinavian response to the Kremlin.
No. It is Germanic, from the Anglo Saxons.
That would probably be most commonly be Anglo-Saxon or Old English; such words as "love", "warmth", "friend", "dear", "bliss" are from it. "Happy" and "guest" are from Scandinavian; "joy" and "peace" are from Old French.
In English, the are called the Scandinavian Mountains
English, Italian, Spanish, German, Finnish, Scandinavian
The move from Old English to Middle English came gradually. English came to rely a lot less on inflection, and more on word order to express things grammatically. English also began to import more words from different languages such as Scandinavian, Latin and French.
Hzhzhzhzhz