German (A+)
The kashykians
Icelandic would be the language most similar to the language of the vikings. Swedish slang for hello include: Tja and Tjena.
They spoke Norse, which is closest to Icelandic and Faroese.
The Vikings used the word "já" to say yes. This term is derived from Old Norse, the language spoken by the Vikings, and is similar to the modern Scandinavian languages, where variations of "ja" are still used to indicate agreement.
The Vikings settled Iceland, and Iceland is very isolated, meaning that there was little external influence on the languge from the original Viking Settlers.
The kashykians
"Swiss" is not a language.
Icelandic would be the language most similar to the language of the vikings. Swedish slang for hello include: Tja and Tjena.
They spoke Norse, which is closest to Icelandic and Faroese.
Most probably that was a language similar to the one used by the Norsemen. Nowadays the most similar one would be Icelandic as an example of isolated medieval Norwegian.
The Vikings used the word "já" to say yes. This term is derived from Old Norse, the language spoken by the Vikings, and is similar to the modern Scandinavian languages, where variations of "ja" are still used to indicate agreement.
The Vikings settled Iceland, and Iceland is very isolated, meaning that there was little external influence on the languge from the original Viking Settlers.
No, the Vikings came from what is now Norway and Denmark. The Vikings also came from Sweden. The Frisians were Dutch, similar but not the same to the Vikings.
Norse.
Danish maybe?
Icelandic is the modern language that was derived from Old Norse, the language used by the Vikings. It has retained many similarities to Old Norse due to Iceland's isolation from other language influences.
They were written in the Old Norse language