I guess you mean Old Norse, as spoken by the Vikings. In that language "white" is expressed by the words hvítr, bleikr or melrakki.
veiðimaðr is old Norse for huntsman
Hart is a word of old English origin, a variation of the Norse word Heorot, which means a fully adult stag deer.
The name Igor is a Russian form of the Old Norse name Ingvarr, which was itself derived from the name of the Germanic god Ing and the Old Norse word 'arr' - 'warrior'. That is, it literally means 'the warrior of Ing'.
The word white in other languages includes the Spanish word Blanco. In Italian this word is said as bianco and in French as blanc.
Úlfr
The Norse word for farmer is "bóndi."
The Norse word for archer is "bogi" or "skytta."
The word for grandfather in Old Norse is "afi."
The Norse word for song is "ljóð" or "kvæði."
veiðimaðr is old Norse for huntsman
The Old English/Norse word and the Modern English word are one in the same; hell=hell.
Norse is a word referring to the Scandinavian races.
the word 'Norse' would be capitalised, but not 'mythology'.
The Vikings spoke Old Norse and the Old Norse word for beast is dýr.
The old Norse is 'mara incubus', which refers to an evil spirit visiting people whilst they are asleep
In Old Norse, the word for book is "bók."
Swedish is a derivative of Old Norse, and their word for "Wolf" is "Ulv". Old Norse, as a language, seems to be extinct.