If by viking writing, you mean the Futhark, that is lost in history. The Futhark has been around since at least 200 CE, way before the vikings were vikings.
Runes were used as an alphabet by the Norse (Vikings), the old Germanic tribes of Northern Europe, and the Anglo-Saxons of Britain. They also had magic uses, such as divination, and protective magic.
Runes are the Viking alphabet. A rune is a symbol that stands for a sound. The runic alphabet was called the Futhark, and there were various versions of it. The original Elder Futhark had 24 runes. In Iceland, it was reduced down to 16-18, while the anglo-saxons expanded it up to 32 runes. A google search of "Futhark" will show what they looked like. The Futhark was called "Futhark" because of the first six runes. Fehu, Uruz, Thurisaz, Ansuz, Raido, Kenaz. F-U-Th-A-R-K, just as the roman "alphabet" is called that because of the first two letters. Alpha-Beta.
The Runic alphabet, primarily used by Germanic tribes, consists of various versions, with the most well-known being the Elder Futhark, which contains 24 characters. Later versions, like the Younger Futhark, have fewer letters, with only 16 characters. Each rune represents a sound or a concept, making the runic system distinct from modern alphabets.
Vikings used their old alfabet, the most well-known probably the futhark. Letters and sounds not quite like today, so it's a hard question to answer.
elder futhark is the oldest known language of the early rse settlers known as the vikings.
As the names indicate, the Eldger Futhark is older than the younger. The former's use is dated from the 2nd to 8th centuries AD; the latter dates from the 8th century AD.
Futhark
If by viking writing, you mean the Futhark, that is lost in history. The Futhark has been around since at least 200 CE, way before the vikings were vikings.
It depends in what context. generally if someone sais rune stones, they mean the Norse ones from either Younger Futhark, Elder Futhark or possible Anglo-Saxon Futhark. The most common of these is Elder Futhark. Rune Stones themselves were traditionally used for divination, but runes with chants or the stones can be used for magic or writing. when writing in them though, it comes more complicated because although a runes might mean a letter, it also means a physical object. For example. the rune for "A" also means cattle and livestock i think. you get the general idea.
Runes were used as an alphabet by the Norse (Vikings), the old Germanic tribes of Northern Europe, and the Anglo-Saxons of Britain. They also had magic uses, such as divination, and protective magic.
Runes are the Viking alphabet. A rune is a symbol that stands for a sound. The runic alphabet was called the Futhark, and there were various versions of it. The original Elder Futhark had 24 runes. In Iceland, it was reduced down to 16-18, while the anglo-saxons expanded it up to 32 runes. A google search of "Futhark" will show what they looked like. The Futhark was called "Futhark" because of the first six runes. Fehu, Uruz, Thurisaz, Ansuz, Raido, Kenaz. F-U-Th-A-R-K, just as the roman "alphabet" is called that because of the first two letters. Alpha-Beta.
In about the 9th Century, Old English switched from the Futhark Alphabet to the Latin alphabet, which is what we use today.
Answer'Futhark' is the name given to an early form of the ancient runic alphabet. There isn't a plural form of it. I can't imagine a situation when it would ever come up.English grammar note: 'Futhark' is an example of an uncountable noun. Other uncountable nouns includeluggageinformationnewstennis, chess, etc.Futhark is the name of an alphabet. Chess is the name of a game. Neither word has a plural.Scrabbles anyone?
The Runic alphabet, primarily used by Germanic tribes, consists of various versions, with the most well-known being the Elder Futhark, which contains 24 characters. Later versions, like the Younger Futhark, have fewer letters, with only 16 characters. Each rune represents a sound or a concept, making the runic system distinct from modern alphabets.
Well, there is the futhark, the old alphabet of the Runes. But way back then there wasn't really a Norway, so calling it Norwegian is stretching it a bit.
Vikings used their old alfabet, the most well-known probably the futhark. Letters and sounds not quite like today, so it's a hard question to answer.