The closest I can get to it is skidi (imagine the upstroke of the 'd' curves back over the round bit and has a diagonal cross a bit like a lower case 't' - this letter in Old Norse is pronounced 'th').
It means sheath.
The word "get" is of Middle English origin, as is the word "got." Both words have Old English and Old Norse roots.
The word "viking" comes from "vikingr".
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.]
Skiing comes from the old Norse word skíð meaning "a stick of wood
It is believed by some to be a combination of the Old English word "Dun" (Hill) and the Norse word "Holme" (Island)
The Answers of the word is German!\ EmilieThe word ski goes back to the Old Norse i.e. North Germanic language word skíð meaning "a stick of wood".
Your mother
The word Valkyrie means 'Chooser of the Slain' in Old Norse.
The Vikings spoke Old Norse and the Old Norse word for beast is dýr.
veiðimaðr is old Norse for huntsman
Swedish is a derivative of Old Norse, and their word for "Wolf" is "Ulv". Old Norse, as a language, seems to be extinct.
The old Norse is 'mara incubus', which refers to an evil spirit visiting people whilst they are asleep
I guess you mean Old Norse, as spoken by the Vikings. In that language "white" is expressed by the words hvítr, bleikr or melrakki.
In Old Norse, the word for book is "bรณk."
It's root are the Old English word Twinn and the Old Norse word Tvinnr, which mean "both" or "double".
The Old English/Norse word and the Modern English word are one in the same; hell=hell.
Norse is a reference to Scandanavian people. Old Norse refers to the older generations.