No. While there is some Nordic blood, most English are Celtic and/or Germanic (Anglo-/Saxon).
Nordic, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish.
Nordic is not a language--it can refer to the language family also called the North Germanic or Scandinavian languages. Since this group includes Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and Faroese, it's mostly spoken in the north of Europe.
Every Nordic country has their own language. Iceland: Icelandic Denmark: Danish Norway: Norwegian Sweden: Swedish Finland: Finnish Faroe Islands(Part of Denmark): Faroese Some parts in Finland speak Finnish-Swedish.
No, Dutch is not considered Nordic. Nordic typically refers to countries such as Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden that have cultural and historical ties. The Netherlands, where Dutch is spoken, is located in Western Europe.
The nordic countries are : Denmark Finland Iceland Norway Sweden Faroe Islands Greenland Aland Germany Poland Czech Republic Slovakia Ukraine Belarus and Lithuania
Nordic Journal of English Studies was created in 2002.
A Nordic mile is equivalent to 10 kilometers (approximately 6 1/4 English miles.)
Lots; nordic countries and danemark
Nordic people.
Neither. The English language is a Germanic language how ever.
Thor, thursday
Nordic people have jobs, just like everybody else. Some jobs may be unique to the area, but most are pretty common world-wide jobs.
Nordic countries tend to celebrate Christmas in the evening on December 24 which is Christmas Eve. Nordic people in Europe have done this since before Christianity adopted the holiday.
December 24th, unless the people are pagan.
Denmark is not just similarwith the Nordic countries, but is one of the Nordic countries.
Rossignol is a French company making skiing and nordic equipment. Link goes to the company's website. The "rossignol" (common masculine noun) is the bird called nightingale in English.
nordic. maybe also eskimo, inuit and lapps.