Old Norse For Beginners - Lesson One: by Haukur Þorgeirsson and Óskar Guðlaugsson
Old Norse For Beginners - Lesson One: by Haukur Þorgeirsson and Óskar Guðlaugsson
0. Miscellany
0.1 About this course
This course is designed for speakers of English. No previous knowledge of Old Norse or any
other language is needed or expected.
The aim of the course is to aid beginning students of Old Norse in building up sufficient basic
knowledge for the student to be able to start studying on his own after the course. The method is
to focus on building up a firm understanding of the grammatical basics of the language, having
the student use the language as much as possible.
We will try throughout the course to spice it up with background information, as most students
of Old Norse have strong interest in Old Norse culture as well as language. We will also refrain
from using nonsensical sentences, preferring "real" made-up sentences or simplified versions of
actual texts.
Lessons are organised into four chapters. The first one (0) contains information that is not really
the core of the matter but can be useful and interesting to read. The next one (1) contains the new
grammar for the lesson, then (2) comes the vocabulary, all of which you should memorise, and
then (3) exercises to help you get a hands on feeling for the subject. In the last chapter (4) we
look at real texts or sentences from the literature. Do not get discouraged if this is difficult at
times, you don't have to memorise everything there, just read through it.
As new terms are introduced make an effort at understanding them; it is essential for making
sense of the text.
1. Grammar
1.1 Declension of pronouns
In Norse, nouns and pronouns are declined in cases. What on earth does that mean? We will use
English as a starting point to explain. Consider the English sentence: "She loves me." If you have
learnt syntax you will know that the "subject" of this sentence is the pronoun "she" and the
"object" is the pronoun "me". If you haven't learnt syntax I'll let you in on the trick; the subject in
a sentence is the word that is doing stuff, the object is the word stuff is done to. So, in our
sentence "she" is doing stuff and it's being done to "me". Simple.
Now let's look at another sentence: "I love her." Okay, now "I" is doing stuff, so "I" is the
subject, and it's being done to "her" which must then be the object. Now consider; how does the
English language distinguish between subject and object in a sentence? As you will see from our
example there are two methods:
1. Changing the word order. You will note that the word preceding the verb is the subject
whereas the word following the verb is the object.
2. Changing the form of the words. Aha! This is where things get interesting. Of course the "she"
in the first sentence is the same person as the "her" in the second sentence, similarly the "I" and
"me" refer to the same bloke. We say the word itself hasn't changed, only the form of it. We'll
make a little table:
1.3 Article
In English there are two kinds of articles; the indefinite article "a and an" and the definite article
"the". The Norse language has no indefinite article, thus "draugr" by itself means "a ghost".
Norse, however, does have a definite article though it doesn't work quite like the English one.
Rather than being a small unchanging word preceding nouns the Norse article is a suffix
depending on case, gender and number. For the masculine words we've introduced the article in
both nominative singular and accusative singular is "-inn" tacked on to the words. Thus:
Indefinite Definite
2. Vocabulary
2.1. Nouns
All nouns here are of the strong masculine declension.
álfr elf
baugr ring
brandr sword
dvergr dwarf
draugr ghost
hestr horse
haukr hawk
hjálmr helmet
konungr king
knífr knife
úlfr wolf
Names:
Haukr
Óláfr
Sigurðr
Tyrfingr
2.2 Pronoun
hann he, it
We gloss the word as both "he" and "it" as it can refer both to men and to things with masculine
gender. Remember that all the nouns given in this lesson are of masculine gender.
2.3 Verbs
The forms given here are the third person singular of the verbs. This corresponds with the
English s-form (like "sees" and "hears"). This is all you need to know for now.
á owns
er is (takes a complement!)
sér sees
segir says
tekr takes
2.4 Adverbs
hér here
eigi not
ok also
2.5 Conjunctions
These conjunctions are used much as in English. Note that 'ok' can be either an adverb or a
conjunction, depending on context.
ok and
en but
After you finish studying the vocabulary you should take on the remaining exercises.
3. Exercises
3.1 Mark the pronouns' cases (optional)
In the following bible quotes there are many pronouns. Locate them and find out what case
they're in. Also note the reason they are in that case.
a) I am he that liveth.
b) Take now thy son whom thou lovest and offer him there for a burnt offering.
c) And when she had brought them unto him to eat, he took hold of her, and said
unto her: "Come lie with me, my sister".
d) Him that dieth of Baasha in the city shall the dogs eat.
e) Judah, thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise.
er when
Heitir Yggdrasill.
Glossary:
veit ek I know