Scots Norse: Difference between revisions
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|dia2= | |dia1={{lang|snon|[[Eastern Scots Norse|Èstèghsc]]}} | ||
| | |dia2={{lang|snon|[[Western Scots Norse|Veastèghsc]]}} | ||
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Scots Norse (Also Sodor Norse; [[w:Autonym|Autonym]]: Sudhraèghsc; /sˠɤðˠ.ˈreʃc/) is a West Nordic language spoken in the Hebrides most closely related to [[w:Norn|Norn]], less so to [[w:Icelandic|Icelandic]] and [[w:Faroese|Faroese]], and quite distantly to [[w:Swedish|Swedish]], [[w:Norwegian|Norwegian]], and [[w:Danish|Danish]]. It has extremely significant influence from mainly [[w:Scottish Gaelic|Scots]] and [[w:Irish|Irish]] [[w:Goidelic languages|Gaelic]], and less so from the [[w:Germanic languages|Germanic]] languages [[w:Scots language|Scots]] [[w:English language|English]]. The Gaelic influence is most noticeable in the [[w:Morphophonology|morphophonology]] of Scots Norse, both with the [[w:palatalization (linguistics)|slender]]/[[w:velarization|broad]] distinction in [[w:consonants|consonants]] and the presence of [[w:consonant mutation|initial consonant mutation]]. | |||
Scots Norse | Scots Norse has roughly eleven [[w:dialect|dialects]] that form the language's two [[w:dialect continuum|dialect continuums]], these are called [[Western Scots Norse|Veastèghsc]] ("Western") and [[Eastern Scots Norse|Èstèghsc]] ("Eastern") Scots Norse respectively, these are further divided into specific dialects, which can be viewed within the articles themselves. Uniting all of these dialects is the [[w:standard language|standard variety]], called ''Hàsudhraèghsc'', literally "High [[w:Suðreyjar|Suðreyjar]]-ish". All [[w:variety (linguistics)|varieties]] of Scots Norse are written using the [[w:Latin script|Latin script]], employing [[w:Gaelic Type|Gaelic Type]] or [[w:Insular Script|Insular]] as the [[w:script|hand]], this acts as a notable exception to the general notion that Gaelic Type and Insular only survive for ornamental or historical usages, as they are still the primary hand used for Scots Norse. | ||
==Classification== | |||
Scots Norse has long been a difficulty for linguists to classify, as it shows clear signs of being a mixed language, though the extent of this has been and still is heavily debated and questioned. As well as the general lack of speakers of Scots Norse, it is hard to determine whether Scots Norse stands as a creole or not, thus the general consensus among modern linguists to class it under ''Gaelo-Nordic'' till enough research has been done to reclassify it under a more appropriate position, potentially as a Scottish-Norse creole. | |||
The difficulty in classifying Scots Norse comes largely down to the morphology and phonology, where it is closer to the modern Gaelic languages than the other Nordic languages, having lost most inflection while simultaneously gaining a simple system of preposition inflections from heavily reduced pronouns. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
===Pre-Modern=== | ===Pre-Modern=== | ||
Scots Norse originates in the mid to late 13th century, around the time Suðreyjar was handed over to Scotland with the [[w:Treaty of Perth|Treaty of Perth]]. Though the language would continue to be largely unchanged from the Old Norse of the 12th century, 1266AD is often used as a dividing date between Old Norse and the earliest forms of Scots Norse. While 1266 is a relatively arbitrary date, it serves its purpose as a convenient divide between two stages, as following the Treaty of Perth, the Hebrides would gain a much larger population of | Scots Norse originates in the mid to late 13th century, around the time Suðreyjar was handed over to [[w:Scotland|Scotland]] with the [[w:Treaty of Perth|Treaty of Perth]]. Though the language would continue to be largely unchanged from the Old Norse of the 12th century, 1266AD is often used as a dividing date between Old Norse and the earliest forms of Scots Norse. While 1266 is a relatively arbitrary date, it serves its purpose as a convenient divide between two stages, as following the Treaty of Perth, the Hebrides would gain a much larger population of Gaelic and English speakers (At this point still [[w:Middle Irish|Middle Irish]] and [[w:Middle English|Middle English]]), and from roughly 1450AD onward, Scots Norse would be increasingly influenced by Scots Gaelic and, to a lesser extent, Scots. | ||
Having been spoken throughout all of Suðreyjar, Scots Norse once had a dialect within the [[w:Isle of Man|Isle of Man]] (Scots Norse {{lang|snon|{{term|Monaègharr}}}}). Little is known about Manx Scots Norse ({{lang|snon|{{term|Monaèsc}}}}), as it is very poorly recorded, the most extensive description being a short document from around 1500AD that contains a list of about 150 words (see ''[[the Noreine speche fra Man]]''), with a very poor description of the pronunciations. Though from this description we can gather that it still had the original [[w:dental fricative|dental fricatives]] that had been lost in other dialects (merging with t/d), we get this from the description "... these [th and dh] are like that of the Saxons' beloved þ." | |||
Following the treaty of Perth, the usage of Norse began declining significantly, with evidence it was nearly extinct by 1550. A small revitalization occurred in the mid 18th century when several of the last native speakers (having had no more than 150 remaining speakers) gathered together to document the language so it could be taught to children. This effort was mostly effective, leading to the first noticeable rise in speaker count since it began declining. By the 1880's, there would be upwards of 1,500 native speakers, a majority of them young. | |||
===Modern=== | ===Modern=== | ||
Modern Scots Norse is typically classed as critically endangered due to how few speakers it has, having no more than 2,500 native speakers as of 2020, and virtually all of them live in the Hebrides, making | Modern Scots Norse is typically classed as critically endangered due to how few speakers it has, having no more than 2,500 native speakers as of 2020, and virtually all of them live in the Hebrides, making its usage extremely limited. | ||
Since the early 1990's, Scots Norse has gained a small but dedicated community of linguists that are determined to further document it and make resources more readily available. As of 2018, an online course has been published that goes over Standard Scots Norse, and it has been continually updated since then, improving the quality and extent of the contents, having started out as a rather barebones description of the phonology, orthography, and rudimentary grammar. | Since the early 1990's, Scots Norse has gained a small but dedicated community of linguists that are determined to further document it and make resources more readily available. As of 2018, an online course has been published that goes over Standard Scots Norse, and it has been continually updated since then, improving the quality and extent of the contents, having started out as a rather barebones description of the phonology, orthography, and rudimentary grammar. | ||
| Line 195: | Line 198: | ||
Every vowel can appear nasalized, though nasalization only occurs in specific positions, and is always shown with a single N. (though not all single Ns are nasalization) | Every vowel can appear nasalized, though nasalization only occurs in specific positions, and is always shown with a single N. (though not all single Ns are nasalization) | ||
*Word finally | *Word finally | ||
*Before a fricative (Though "nh" is / | *Before a fricative (Though "nh" is /z/) | ||
*In some irregular positions when loaned from another language. | *In some irregular positions when loaned from another language. | ||
===Prosody=== | ===Prosody=== | ||
| Line 339: | Line 206: | ||
===Mutation=== | ===Mutation=== | ||
Since Old Norse, initial [[w:consonant mutation|consonant mutation]] has developed. Scots Norse has | Since Old Norse, initial [[w:consonant mutation|consonant mutation]] has developed. Scots Norse has three forms: | ||
:radical (basic) | :radical (basic) | ||
: | :lenition | ||
: | :eclipsis | ||
these can be shown quite well through | these can be shown quite well through pronoun + verb, as a pronoun exists that causes both, the word order for these will be slightly odd. | ||
The following gives an example using | The following gives an example using "mic" ("I, me"), "ha" ("he, him"), and "ic" ("we, us", emphatic): | ||
:''{{lang|snon|mic tàlarr}}'' /ˈmʲɪc ˈto.ʎərʲ/ — "I speak" | |||
:''{{lang|snon|ha dtàlarr}}'' /ˈçæ ˈdo.ʎərʲ/ — "he speaks" | |||
:''{{lang|snon|ic thàlarr}}'' /ˈɪc ˈθo.ʎərʲ/ — "we (emphatic) speak" | |||
:'' | |||
:'' | |||
:'' | |||
==Orthography== | ==Orthography== | ||
| Line 370: | Line 231: | ||
| colspan=2 | plain | | colspan=2 | plain | ||
| /b/ | | /b/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term| | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' /ˈbɪɡ/ | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=2 | broad | | colspan=2 | broad | ||
| /bˠ/ | | /bˠ/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|bòegh}}}}'' / | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|bòegh}}}}'' /ˈbˠoj/ | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=2 | slender | | colspan=2 | slender | ||
| /bʲ/ | | /bʲ/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term| | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|barrg}}}}'' /ˈbʲærʲɟ/ | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan= | | rowspan=5 | '''bh''' | ||
| | | rowspan=2 | before u/ù | ||
| /./ | | intervocalically | ||
| /./ | |||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | |||
|- | |||
| elsewhere | |||
| null | |||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan=3 | | | rowspan=3 | otherwise | ||
| plain | | plain | ||
| /v/ | | /v/ | ||
| Line 391: | Line 257: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| broad | | broad | ||
| /vˠ/ | | /vˠ~w/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Line 401: | Line 267: | ||
| colspan=2 | plain/broad | | colspan=2 | plain/broad | ||
| /k/ | | /k/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|coeth}}}}'' / | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|coeth}}}}'' /ˈkɔç/ | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=2 | slender | | colspan=2 | slender | ||
| /c/ | | /c/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|ceth}}}}'' / | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|ceth}}}}'' /ˈcɛç/ | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan=2 | '''ch''' | | rowspan=2 | '''ch''' | ||
| Line 423: | Line 289: | ||
| /kɾ/ | | /kɾ/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|cnà}}}}'' /ˈkɾo/ | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|cnà}}}}'' /ˈkɾo/ | ||
|- | |||
| '''chi''' | |||
| colspan=2 | before a vowel | |||
| /ç/ | |||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | |||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=3 | '''chn''' | | colspan=3 | '''chn''' | ||
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| colspan=2 | plain | | colspan=2 | plain | ||
| /d/ | | /d/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|dàegh}}}}'' / | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|dàegh}}}}'' /ˈdoj/ | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=2 | broad | | colspan=2 | broad | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| colspan=2 | slender | | colspan=2 | slender | ||
| / | | /dʲ/ | ||
| {{term|}} // | | {{term|}} // | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan= | | rowspan=6 | '''dh''' | ||
| colspan=2 | | | colspan=2 | plain | ||
| /./ | | /ð/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan=2 | broad | |||
| normally | |||
| /ɣ/ | |||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | |||
|- | |||
| intervocalically | |||
| /./ | |||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | | rowspan=3 | slender | ||
| / | | normally | ||
| {{term|}} // | | /ʝ~j/ | ||
| ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | |||
|- | |- | ||
| | | intervocalically before /ə, ɪ, i/ | ||
| / | | /./ | ||
| {{term|}} // | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | | elsewhere before /ə, ɪ, i/ | ||
| | | null | ||
| {{term|}} // | | ''{{lang|snon|{{term|}}}}'' // | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan=2 | '''g''' | | rowspan=2 | '''g''' | ||
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==Morphology== | ==Morphology== | ||
===Pronouns=== | |||
{{snon-pronouns}} | |||
===Nouns=== | ===Nouns=== | ||
Nouns have been reduced down to a basic singular/plural distinction, with the masc/fem distinction only maintained when paired with the article ''{{lang|snon|{{term|hin}}}}''. | |||
The | The plural is always formed with -arr, while the singular has roughly two methods that apply to both genders, those being "e-ᶫ" and "-" (note that the "e-" represents slenderization of the preceding consonant). | ||
''All'' nouns fit into one of these two patterns, regardless the forms in Old Norse. Below are several examples. | |||
{{snon-decl-m- | {{snon-decl|a|ld|g=m|l=y}} | ||
{{snon-decl-m- | {{snon-decl|h|àt|àet|g=m|l=y}} | ||
{{snon-decl|h|àmar|4=àmr|g=m|l=y}} | |||
{{snon-decl|b|èdh|g=m|l=y}} | |||
{{snon-decl|b|ògh|òegh|g=m|l=y}} | |||
{{snon-decl|m|àl|àel|g=m}} | |||
{{snon-decl|p|ost|oest|g=m}} | |||
{{snon-decl|a|rrv|l=y}} | |||
{{snon-decl|b|èt}} | |||
===Adjectives=== | |||
{{snon | Both the comparative and superlative forms were lost by the time of Sudrey Norse, being replaced with the usage of {{lang|snon|{{term|mèr}}}} ("more") and {{lang|snon|{{term|mast}}}} ("most"), so rather than, say, {{mn|non|beztr}} (hypothetical Scots Norse **{{lang|snon|bast}}) for "better", it is instead {{lang|snon|mèr ghòedh}} (lit. "more good"). | ||
In modern Scots Norse, adjectives have at most three forms, 2 singulars and a plural. Only the singular changes for gender, where the distinction is through mutation, the masculine causing lenition while the feminine doesn't cause mutation. | |||
{{snon-decl-adj|a|ld}} | |||
===Numerals=== | |||
{{snon- | {|class="wikitable" | ||
!1 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|èn}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!2 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|tfèrr}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!3 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|trìrr}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!4 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|fiòrarr}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!5 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|fi}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!6 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|sac}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!7 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|siò}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!8 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|àet}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!9 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|naì}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!10 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|taì}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!11 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|aliov}}}} | |||
|- | |||
!12 | |||
|{{lang|snon|{{term|tòlv}}}} | |||
|- | |||
|} | |||
===Prepositions=== | ===Prepositions=== | ||
Scots Norse has a very, very simple system of inflected prepositions, only inflecting for person and number | Scots Norse has a very, very simple system of inflected prepositions, only inflecting for person and number. | ||
A large amount of speakers simply don't use inflected prepositions. | |||
{{snon-infl-prep|i|3=io|n=y}} | |||
{{snon-infl-prep|til| | {{snon-infl-prep|til|3=tiol}} | ||
===Verbs=== | ===Verbs=== | ||
| Line 787: | Line 705: | ||
The stative doesn't exist for every verb, but the forms are still displayed for convenience's sake. | The stative doesn't exist for every verb, but the forms are still displayed for convenience's sake. | ||
The original mediopassive indicative only remains in a small set of verbs acting as a reciprocal, typically physical actions taken towards others, like {{lang|snon|{{term|}}}} ("to fight"), {{lang|snon|{{term|slà}}}} ("to hit"), {{lang|snon|{{term|}}}} ("to embrace"), as well as a few abstract verbs, such as {{lang|snon|{{term|}}}} ("to love"). Otherwise it's been replaced by {{lang|snon|{{term| | The original mediopassive indicative only remains in a small set of verbs acting as a reciprocal, typically physical actions taken towards others, like {{lang|snon|{{term|}}}} ("to fight"), {{lang|snon|{{term|slà}}}} ("to hit"), {{lang|snon|{{term|}}}} ("to embrace"), as well as a few abstract verbs, such as {{lang|snon|{{term|elsc}}}} ("to love"). Otherwise it's been replaced by {{lang|snon|{{term|hinnar}}}} | ||
Verbs have reduced to such a limited number of forms that analogy and sound changes have leveled them all down to essentially one pattern (excluding a few irregular verbs), which seemingly descends from Old Norse's weak class 2 pattern. | |||
{{snon-conj | {{snon-conj|t|àl|àel}} | ||
{{snon-conj|m|èl}} | |||
{{snon-conj|à|gh|egh}} | |||
====Suppletive verbs==== | ====Suppletive verbs==== | ||
There are very few known suppletive verbs in Scots Norse, the main one being the copula ''{{lang|snon|vèr}}'', and even it has been leveled by many speakers. | |||
{{snon-conj-vèr}} | |||
"arr" and "varr" are the more prevalent forms, but the regularized forms "vèrarr" and "vèradharr" are also rather common. | |||
Another suppletive verb is that of {{lang|snon|{{term|elsc}}}}, which has a suppletive reciprocal from the Old Norse verb "unna" (Scots Norse "uen") | |||
{{snon-conj|e|lsc}} | |||
==Syntax== | ==Syntax== | ||
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Allir menn eru bornir frjálsir ok jafnir at virðingu ok réttum. Þeir eru allir viti gœddir ok samvizku, ok skulu gøra hvárr til annars bróðurliga. | Allir menn eru bornir frjálsir ok jafnir at virðingu ok réttum. Þeir eru allir viti gœddir ok samvizku, ok skulu gøra hvárr til annars bróðurliga. | ||
====Scots Norse==== | ====Scots Norse==== | ||
{{lang|snon| | {{lang|snon|arr manarr al bhori mhriàl h-o hiavn, vèrann vhirrdhing o rhèt h-atharr. vèrann gaèdhadh h-o shanvisc h-atharr, o shcùl ghèor hanna thil bròdhligh.}} </br> | ||
arr manarr al bhori mhriàl h-o hiavn, vèrann vhirrdhing o rhèt h-atharr. vèrann gaèdhadh h-o shanvisc h-atharr, o shcùl ghèor hanna thil bròdhligh. | |||
=====English translation===== | =====English translation===== | ||
:lit: "all men are born free and equal, being dignity and rights at them. | :lit: "all men are born free and equal, being dignity and rights at them. being reason and conscience at them, and should act to brotherhood at each other" | ||
:"all men are born free and equal, having dignity and rights. they | :"all men are born free and equal, having dignity and rights. they have reason and conscience, and should act to eachother as a brotherhood" | ||
===Deor=== | ===Deor=== | ||
| Line 1,465: | Line 1,380: | ||
[[Category:A posteriori]] | [[Category:A posteriori]] | ||
[[Category:Germanic languages]] | [[Category:Germanic languages]] | ||
[[Category:Scots Norse | [[Category:Scots Norse language]] | ||
Latest revision as of 00:52, 4 May 2026
This article is private. The author requests that you do not make changes to this project without approval. By all means, please help fix spelling, grammar and organisation problems, thank you. |
| Scots Norse | |
|---|---|
| Sudhraèsc | |
| Pronunciation | [sˠɤðˠ.ˈreʃc] |
| Created by | Melinoë |
| Date | April 3rd, 2026 |
| Native to | Suðreyjar |
| Ethnicity | Norse Scots |
| Native speakers | (L1) 2,000 (2019) (L2) < 50,000 |
Indo-European
| |
Early forms | |
Dialects | |
| Official status | |
Official language in | Scotland |
Scots Norse is classified as critically endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger | |
Scots Norse (Also Sodor Norse; Autonym: Sudhraèghsc; /sˠɤðˠ.ˈreʃc/) is a West Nordic language spoken in the Hebrides most closely related to Norn, less so to Icelandic and Faroese, and quite distantly to Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish. It has extremely significant influence from mainly Scots and Irish Gaelic, and less so from the Germanic languages Scots English. The Gaelic influence is most noticeable in the morphophonology of Scots Norse, both with the slender/broad distinction in consonants and the presence of initial consonant mutation.
Scots Norse has roughly eleven dialects that form the language's two dialect continuums, these are called Veastèghsc ("Western") and Èstèghsc ("Eastern") Scots Norse respectively, these are further divided into specific dialects, which can be viewed within the articles themselves. Uniting all of these dialects is the standard variety, called Hàsudhraèghsc, literally "High Suðreyjar-ish". All varieties of Scots Norse are written using the Latin script, employing Gaelic Type or Insular as the hand, this acts as a notable exception to the general notion that Gaelic Type and Insular only survive for ornamental or historical usages, as they are still the primary hand used for Scots Norse.
Classification
Scots Norse has long been a difficulty for linguists to classify, as it shows clear signs of being a mixed language, though the extent of this has been and still is heavily debated and questioned. As well as the general lack of speakers of Scots Norse, it is hard to determine whether Scots Norse stands as a creole or not, thus the general consensus among modern linguists to class it under Gaelo-Nordic till enough research has been done to reclassify it under a more appropriate position, potentially as a Scottish-Norse creole.
The difficulty in classifying Scots Norse comes largely down to the morphology and phonology, where it is closer to the modern Gaelic languages than the other Nordic languages, having lost most inflection while simultaneously gaining a simple system of preposition inflections from heavily reduced pronouns.
History
Pre-Modern
Scots Norse originates in the mid to late 13th century, around the time Suðreyjar was handed over to Scotland with the Treaty of Perth. Though the language would continue to be largely unchanged from the Old Norse of the 12th century, 1266AD is often used as a dividing date between Old Norse and the earliest forms of Scots Norse. While 1266 is a relatively arbitrary date, it serves its purpose as a convenient divide between two stages, as following the Treaty of Perth, the Hebrides would gain a much larger population of Gaelic and English speakers (At this point still Middle Irish and Middle English), and from roughly 1450AD onward, Scots Norse would be increasingly influenced by Scots Gaelic and, to a lesser extent, Scots.
Having been spoken throughout all of Suðreyjar, Scots Norse once had a dialect within the Isle of Man (Scots Norse Monaègharr). Little is known about Manx Scots Norse (Monaèsc), as it is very poorly recorded, the most extensive description being a short document from around 1500AD that contains a list of about 150 words (see the Noreine speche fra Man), with a very poor description of the pronunciations. Though from this description we can gather that it still had the original dental fricatives that had been lost in other dialects (merging with t/d), we get this from the description "... these [th and dh] are like that of the Saxons' beloved þ."
Following the treaty of Perth, the usage of Norse began declining significantly, with evidence it was nearly extinct by 1550. A small revitalization occurred in the mid 18th century when several of the last native speakers (having had no more than 150 remaining speakers) gathered together to document the language so it could be taught to children. This effort was mostly effective, leading to the first noticeable rise in speaker count since it began declining. By the 1880's, there would be upwards of 1,500 native speakers, a majority of them young.
Modern
Modern Scots Norse is typically classed as critically endangered due to how few speakers it has, having no more than 2,500 native speakers as of 2020, and virtually all of them live in the Hebrides, making its usage extremely limited.
Since the early 1990's, Scots Norse has gained a small but dedicated community of linguists that are determined to further document it and make resources more readily available. As of 2018, an online course has been published that goes over Standard Scots Norse, and it has been continually updated since then, improving the quality and extent of the contents, having started out as a rather barebones description of the phonology, orthography, and rudimentary grammar.
Phonology
| labial | dental | alveolar | velar | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| plain | broad | slender | plain | broad | slender | plain | broad | slender | plain | broad | slender | ||
| Nasal | m | mˠ | mʲ | n | nˠ | ɲ | |||||||
| Stop | Unvoiced | p | pˠ | pʲ | t | tˠ | tʲ | k | c | ||||
| Voiced | b | bˠ | bʲ | d | dˠ | dʲ | g | ɟ | |||||
| Fricative | Unvoiced | f | fˠ | fʲ | θ | θˠ | θʲ | s | sˠ | ʃ | h¹ | x | ç |
| Voiced | v | vˠ | vʲ | ð | ðˠ | ðʲ | z | zˠ | ʒ | ɣ | ʝ | ||
| Approximant | r, l | rˠ, lˠ | rʲ, ʎ | j | |||||||||
- /h/ merges with /x/ outside of Standard Scots Norse.
| Front | Back | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Unround | Round | ||
| High | i | u | |
| Near-High | ɪ | ɤ~ʊ | |
| Mid | e | (ə) | o |
| Low | æ~ɛ | ɔ~ɒ | |
- /ə/ is the unstressed realization of /æ, ɔ/. (differing by slender vs broad)
- /æ/ is often /ɛ/ before nasals, but rarely so anywhere else.
Long vowels have long been lost, though their effects remain prominently, influencing the languages stress patterns heavily.
Every vowel can appear nasalized, though nasalization only occurs in specific positions, and is always shown with a single N. (though not all single Ns are nasalization)
- Word finally
- Before a fricative (Though "nh" is /z/)
- In some irregular positions when loaned from another language.
Prosody
The rules for stress are very slightly more complex than they were in Old Norse, but not by much.
- Stress always goes on the left-most syllable possible. When there are vowels with a grave, stress goes to the first one, skipping over all vowels without one. (so sudhraèir is stressed on "aèi")
Mutation
Since Old Norse, initial consonant mutation has developed. Scots Norse has three forms:
- radical (basic)
- lenition
- eclipsis
these can be shown quite well through pronoun + verb, as a pronoun exists that causes both, the word order for these will be slightly odd.
The following gives an example using "mic" ("I, me"), "ha" ("he, him"), and "ic" ("we, us", emphatic):
- mic tàlarr /ˈmʲɪc ˈto.ʎərʲ/ — "I speak"
- ha dtàlarr /ˈçæ ˈdo.ʎərʲ/ — "he speaks"
- ic thàlarr /ˈɪc ˈθo.ʎərʲ/ — "we (emphatic) speak"
Orthography
(updated up to "dh")
| consonants | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Letter(s) | Phoneme | Examples | ||
| b | plain | /b/ | [Term?] /ˈbɪɡ/ | |
| broad | /bˠ/ | bòegh /ˈbˠoj/ | ||
| slender | /bʲ/ | barrg /ˈbʲærʲɟ/ | ||
| bh | before u/ù | intervocalically | /./ | [Term?] // |
| elsewhere | null | [Term?] // | ||
| otherwise | plain | /v/ | [Term?] // | |
| broad | /vˠ~w/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /vʲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| c | plain/broad | /k/ | coeth /ˈkɔç/ | |
| slender | /c/ | ceth /ˈcɛç/ | ||
| ch | plain/broad | /x/ | loch /ˈɫɔx/ | |
| slender | /ç/ | [Term?] // | ||
| chd | /xk/ | [Term?] // | ||
| cn | /kɾ/ | cnà /ˈkɾo/ | ||
| chi | before a vowel | /ç/ | [Term?] // | |
| chn | /xɾ/ [ɾ̥] | [Term?] // | ||
| d | plain | /d/ | dàegh /ˈdoj/ | |
| broad | /dˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /dʲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| dh | plain | /ð/ | [Term?] // | |
| broad | normally | /ɣ/ | [Term?] // | |
| intervocalically | /./ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | normally | /ʝ~j/ | [Term?] // | |
| intervocalically before /ə, ɪ, i/ | /./ | [Term?] // | ||
| elsewhere before /ə, ɪ, i/ | null | [Term?] // | ||
| g | plain/broad | /g/ | godh /ˈɡɔ/ | |
| slender | /ɟ/ | dàge /ˈdoɟ/ | ||
| gh | plain/broad | /ɣ/ | (han) ghodh /(ˈhã) ˈɣɔ/ | |
| slender | /ʝ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| gn | /ɡɾ/ | gnaèt /ˈɡɾet/ | ||
| h | plain | /h/ | hàte /ˈhot͡ʃ/ | |
| broad | /x/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ç/ | dìhiale /ˈd͡ʒi.çəʎ/ | ||
| l | plain | non-finally | /l/ | [Term?] // |
| finally | /ʃ/ | sèl /ˈʃeʃ/ | ||
| broad | /lˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ʎ/ | sèlir /ˈʃe.ʎɪθ͇/ | ||
| ll | plain | /l/ | tàll /ˈtol/ | |
| broad | /lˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ʎ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| m | plain | /m/ | màl /ˈmoʃ/ | |
| broad | /mˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /mʲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| mh | plain | /m̥/ | (hin) mhàl /(ˈçɪ̃) ˈm̥oʃ/ | |
| broad | /m̥ˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /m̥ʲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| n | plain | /n/ | [Term?] // | |
| broad | /nˠ~ŋ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ɲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| post-vocalic when final/pre-fricative | /Ṽ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| nh | plain | /n̥/ | [Term?] // | |
| broad | /n̥ˠ~ŋ̊/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ɲ̊/ | [Term?] // | ||
| nn | plain | /n/ | hann /han/ | |
| broad | /nˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ɲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| p | plain | initially, before a vowel/finally | /pʰ/ | [Term?] // |
| elsewhere | /p/ | priadh /ˈprʲa/ | ||
| broad | /pˠ/ | post /ˈpˠɔstʰ/ | ||
| slender | /pʲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| ph | plain | /f/ | ophàrr /ɒ.ˈfor/ | |
| broad | /fˠ/ | (sa) phost /(ˈsa) ˈfˠɔstʰ/ | ||
| slender | /fʲ/ | (han) phiutharr /(ˈhã) ˈfʲɤ.ər/ | ||
| r | finally | /θ͇/ | bhar /ˈvaθ͇/ | |
| plain | /r/ | sudhraèscc /sˠʌ.ˈreskʰ/ | ||
| broad | /rˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /rʲ/ | bhère /ˈvʲerʲ/ | ||
| rr | finally | /r/ | bhàrr /ˈvor/ | |
| plain | /r/ | [Term?] // | ||
| broad | /rˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /rʲ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| -rt, -rd | /ɾʃt̪/ | [Term?] // | ||
| s | plain | /s/ | [Term?] // | |
| broad | /sˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ʃ/ | sèl /ˈʃeʃ/ | ||
| sh | plain | /h/ | [Term?] // | |
| broad | /x/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ç/ | (bholl) shèl /(ˈvˠɔl) ˈçeʃ/ | ||
| t | plain | initially/finally | /tʰ/ | tàll /ˈtʰol/ |
| elsewhere | /t/ | [Term?] // | ||
| broad | /tˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | initially/finally | /t͡ʃʰ/ | [Term?] // | |
| elsewhere | /t͡ʃ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| th | intervocalic/pre-consonantal/finally | /./ or null | [Term?] // | |
| plain | /h/ | [Term?] // | ||
| broad | /x/ | thù /ˈxu/ | ||
| slender | /ç/ | [Term?] // | ||
| z | plain | /z/ | [Term?] // | |
| broad | /zˠ/ | [Term?] // | ||
| slender | /ʒ/ | (an) zèl /(ˈan) ˈʒeʃ/ | ||
Morphology
Pronouns
| simple | emphatic | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| singular | plural | singular | plural | ||
| 1st | mic | vit | mèrr | oecᶫ | |
| 2nd | tic | tit | tèrr | icᶫ | |
| 3rd | masc | haᶰ | tèrr | hanuᶰ | tèᶰ |
| fem | hoᶰ | henᶫ, honuᶰ | |||
| reflexive | sic, -sc | sèrr, -sc | |||
Nouns
Nouns have been reduced down to a basic singular/plural distinction, with the masc/fem distinction only maintained when paired with the article hin.
The plural is always formed with -arr, while the singular has roughly two methods that apply to both genders, those being "e-ᶫ" and "-" (note that the "e-" represents slenderization of the preceding consonant).
All nouns fit into one of these two patterns, regardless the forms in Old Norse. Below are several examples.
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | aldᶫ | aldarr |
| definite | hin h'aldᶫ | hin h'aldarr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | hàetᶫ | hàtarr |
| definite | hin ghàetᶫ | hin ghàtarr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | hàmarᶫ | hàmrarr |
| definite | hin ghàmarᶫ | hin ghàmrarr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | bèdhᶫ | bèdharr |
| definite | hin bhèdhᶫ | hin bhèdharr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | bòeghᶫ | bògharr |
| definite | hin bhòeghᶫ | hin bhògharr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | màel | màlarr |
| definite | hin mhàel | hin mhàlarr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | poest | postarr |
| definite | hin phoest | hin phostarr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | arrvᶫ | arrvarr |
| definite | hin arrvᶫ | hin arrvarr |
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| indefinite | bèt | bètarr |
| definite | hin bèt | hin bètarr |
Adjectives
Both the comparative and superlative forms were lost by the time of Sudrey Norse, being replaced with the usage of mèr ("more") and mast ("most"), so rather than, say, Old Norse beztr (hypothetical Scots Norse **bast) for "better", it is instead mèr ghòedh (lit. "more good").
In modern Scots Norse, adjectives have at most three forms, 2 singulars and a plural. Only the singular changes for gender, where the distinction is through mutation, the masculine causing lenition while the feminine doesn't cause mutation.
| masculine | feminine | plural |
|---|---|---|
| h'aldᶫ | ald | aldarr |
ᶫ: Triggers lenition
Numerals
| 1 | èn |
|---|---|
| 2 | tfèrr |
| 3 | trìrr |
| 4 | fiòrarr |
| 5 | fi |
| 6 | sac |
| 7 | siò |
| 8 | àet |
| 9 | naì |
| 10 | taì |
| 11 | aliov |
| 12 | tòlv |
Prepositions
Scots Norse has a very, very simple system of inflected prepositions, only inflecting for person and number.
A large amount of speakers simply don't use inflected prepositions.
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | ig | idac | inhᶰ |
| plural | iogh | igh | idà |
ᶰ: causes nasal
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | tilg | tiltac | tilhᶰ |
| plural | tiolch | tilch | tiltà |
ᶰ: causes nasal
Verbs
Many significant changes have happened to the verb system since Old Norse, notably both the mood and voice distinctions have been lost. The active indicative has descended into the present and past tense, while the active subjunctive was lost entirely. The oppositive happened in the mediopassive, with the subjunctive becoming the future and stative, while the indicative was lost.
The stative doesn't exist for every verb, but the forms are still displayed for convenience's sake.
The original mediopassive indicative only remains in a small set of verbs acting as a reciprocal, typically physical actions taken towards others, like [Term?] ("to fight"), slà ("to hit"), [Term?] ("to embrace"), as well as a few abstract verbs, such as elsc ("to love"). Otherwise it's been replaced by hinnar
Verbs have reduced to such a limited number of forms that analogy and sound changes have leveled them all down to essentially one pattern (excluding a few irregular verbs), which seemingly descends from Old Norse's weak class 2 pattern.
| present | past | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | tàel | — | ||||||
| participle | tàlann | tàladh | ||||||
| singular | plural | impersonal | ||||||
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |||
| pos. | pres. | tàlarr mic | tàlarr tic | tàlarr ha | tàlarr vit | tàlarr tit | tàlarr tèrr | tàlarrt |
| past | tàladharr mic | tàladharr tic | tàladharr ha | tàladharr vit | tàladharr tit | tàladharr tèrr | tàladharrt | |
| fut. | tàlist mic | tàlist tic | tàlist ha | tàlist vit | tàlist tit | tàlist tèrr | tàlista | |
| stat. | tàladhst mic | tàladhst tic | tàladhst ha | tàladhst vit | tàladhst tit | tàladhst tèrr | tàladhsta | |
| neg. | pres. | è thàlarr mic | è thàlarr tic | è thàlarr ha | è thàlarr vit | è thàlarr tit | è thàlarr tèrr | è thàlarrt |
| past | è thàladharr mic | è thàladharr tic | è thàladharr ha | è thàladharr vit | è thàladharr tit | è thàladharr tèrr | è thàladharrt | |
| fut. | è thàlist mic | è thàlist tic | è thàlist ha | è thàlist vit | è thàlist tit | è thàlist tèrr | è thàlista | |
| stat. | è thàladhst mic | è thàladhst tic | è thàladhst ha | è thàladhst vit | è thàladhst tit | è thàladhst tèrr | è thàladhsta | |
| continuative | tàlann'arr u mic | tàlann'arr u dic | tàlann'arr u gha | tàlann'arr u bit | tàlann'arr u dit | tàlann'arr u dèrr | tàlann'arrt h'u | |
| perf. | pres. | tàladh'arr u mic | tàladh'arr u dic | tàladh'arr u gha | tàladh'arr u bit | tàladh'arr u dit | tàladh'arr u dèrr | tàladh'arrt h'u |
| past | tàladh'adharr u mic | tàladh'adharr u dic | tàladh'adharr u gha | tàladh'adharr u bit | tàladh'adharr u dit | tàladh'adharr u dèrr | tàladh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | tàladh'ist u mic | tàladh'ist u dic | tàladh'ist u gha | tàladh'ist u bit | tàladh'ist u dit | tàladh'ist u dèrr | tàladh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | tàladh'adhist u mic | tàladh'adhist u dic | tàladh'adhist u gha | tàladh'adhist u bit | tàladh'adhist u dit | tàladh'adhist u dèrr | tàladh'adhista h'u | |
| neg. perf. | pres. | è thàladh'arr u mic | è thàladh'arr u dic | è thàladh'arr u gha | è thàladh'arr u bit | è thàladh'arr u dit | è thàladh'arr u dèrr | è thàladh'arrt h'u |
| past | è thàladh'adharr u mic | è thàladh'adharr u dic | è thàladh'adharr u gha | è thàladh'adharr u bit | è thàladh'adharr u dit | è thàladh'adharr u dèrr | è thàladh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | è thàladh'ist u mic | è thàladh'ist u dic | è thàladh'ist u gha | è thàladh'ist u bit | è thàladh'ist u dit | è thàladh'ist u dèrr | è thàladh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | è thàladh'adhist u mic | è thàladh'adhist u dic | è thàladh'adhist u gha | è thàladh'adhist u bit | è thàladh'adhist u dit | è thàladh'adhist u dèrr | è thàladh'adhista h'u | |
| present | past | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | mèl | — | ||||||
| participle | mèlann | mèladh | ||||||
| singular | plural | impersonal | ||||||
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |||
| pos. | pres. | mèlarr mic | mèlarr tic | mèlarr ha | mèlarr vit | mèlarr tit | mèlarr tèrr | mèlarrt |
| past | mèladharr mic | mèladharr tic | mèladharr ha | mèladharr vit | mèladharr tit | mèladharr tèrr | mèladharrt | |
| fut. | mèlist mic | mèlist tic | mèlist ha | mèlist vit | mèlist tit | mèlist tèrr | mèlista | |
| stat. | mèladhst mic | mèladhst tic | mèladhst ha | mèladhst vit | mèladhst tit | mèladhst tèrr | mèladhsta | |
| neg. | pres. | è mhèlarr mic | è mhèlarr tic | è mhèlarr ha | è mhèlarr vit | è mhèlarr tit | è mhèlarr tèrr | è mhèlarrt |
| past | è mhèladharr mic | è mhèladharr tic | è mhèladharr ha | è mhèladharr vit | è mhèladharr tit | è mhèladharr tèrr | è mhèladharrt | |
| fut. | è mhèlist mic | è mhèlist tic | è mhèlist ha | è mhèlist vit | è mhèlist tit | è mhèlist tèrr | è mhèlista | |
| stat. | è mhèladhst mic | è mhèladhst tic | è mhèladhst ha | è mhèladhst vit | è mhèladhst tit | è mhèladhst tèrr | è mhèladhsta | |
| continuative | mèlann'arr u mic | mèlann'arr u dic | mèlann'arr u gha | mèlann'arr u bit | mèlann'arr u dit | mèlann'arr u dèrr | mèlann'arrt h'u | |
| perf. | pres. | mèladh'arr u mic | mèladh'arr u dic | mèladh'arr u gha | mèladh'arr u bit | mèladh'arr u dit | mèladh'arr u dèrr | mèladh'arrt h'u |
| past | mèladh'adharr u mic | mèladh'adharr u dic | mèladh'adharr u gha | mèladh'adharr u bit | mèladh'adharr u dit | mèladh'adharr u dèrr | mèladh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | mèladh'ist u mic | mèladh'ist u dic | mèladh'ist u gha | mèladh'ist u bit | mèladh'ist u dit | mèladh'ist u dèrr | mèladh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | mèladh'adhist u mic | mèladh'adhist u dic | mèladh'adhist u gha | mèladh'adhist u bit | mèladh'adhist u dit | mèladh'adhist u dèrr | mèladh'adhista h'u | |
| neg. perf. | pres. | è mhèladh'arr u mic | è mhèladh'arr u dic | è mhèladh'arr u gha | è mhèladh'arr u bit | è mhèladh'arr u dit | è mhèladh'arr u dèrr | è mhèladh'arrt h'u |
| past | è mhèladh'adharr u mic | è mhèladh'adharr u dic | è mhèladh'adharr u gha | è mhèladh'adharr u bit | è mhèladh'adharr u dit | è mhèladh'adharr u dèrr | è mhèladh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | è mhèladh'ist u mic | è mhèladh'ist u dic | è mhèladh'ist u gha | è mhèladh'ist u bit | è mhèladh'ist u dit | è mhèladh'ist u dèrr | è mhèladh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | è mhèladh'adhist u mic | è mhèladh'adhist u dic | è mhèladh'adhist u gha | è mhèladh'adhist u bit | è mhèladh'adhist u dit | è mhèladh'adhist u dèrr | è mhèladh'adhista h'u | |
| present | past | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | àegh | — | ||||||
| participle | àghann | àghadh | ||||||
| singular | plural | impersonal | ||||||
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |||
| pos. | pres. | àgharr mic | àgharr tic | àgharr ha | àgharr vit | àgharr tit | àgharr tèrr | àgharrt |
| past | àghadharr mic | àghadharr tic | àghadharr ha | àghadharr vit | àghadharr tit | àghadharr tèrr | àghadharrt | |
| fut. | àghist mic | àghist tic | àghist ha | àghist vit | àghist tit | àghist tèrr | àghista | |
| stat. | àghadhst mic | àghadhst tic | àghadhst ha | àghadhst vit | àghadhst tit | àghadhst tèrr | àghadhsta | |
| neg. | pres. | è h'àgharr mic | è h'àgharr tic | è h'àgharr ha | è h'àgharr vit | è h'àgharr tit | è h'àgharr tèrr | è h'àgharrt |
| past | è h'àghadharr mic | è h'àghadharr tic | è h'àghadharr ha | è h'àghadharr vit | è h'àghadharr tit | è h'àghadharr tèrr | è h'àghadharrt | |
| fut. | è h'àghist mic | è h'àghist tic | è h'àghist ha | è h'àghist vit | è h'àghist tit | è h'àghist tèrr | è h'àghista | |
| stat. | è h'àghadhst mic | è h'àghadhst tic | è h'àghadhst ha | è h'àghadhst vit | è h'àghadhst tit | è h'àghadhst tèrr | è h'àghadhsta | |
| continuative | àghann'arr u mic | àghann'arr u dic | àghann'arr u gha | àghann'arr u bit | àghann'arr u dit | àghann'arr u dèrr | àghann'arrt h'u | |
| perf. | pres. | àghadh'arr u mic | àghadh'arr u dic | àghadh'arr u gha | àghadh'arr u bit | àghadh'arr u dit | àghadh'arr u dèrr | àghadh'arrt h'u |
| past | àghadh'adharr u mic | àghadh'adharr u dic | àghadh'adharr u gha | àghadh'adharr u bit | àghadh'adharr u dit | àghadh'adharr u dèrr | àghadh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | àghadh'ist u mic | àghadh'ist u dic | àghadh'ist u gha | àghadh'ist u bit | àghadh'ist u dit | àghadh'ist u dèrr | àghadh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | àghadh'adhist u mic | àghadh'adhist u dic | àghadh'adhist u gha | àghadh'adhist u bit | àghadh'adhist u dit | àghadh'adhist u dèrr | àghadh'adhista h'u | |
| neg. perf. | pres. | è h'àghadh'arr u mic | è h'àghadh'arr u dic | è h'àghadh'arr u gha | è h'àghadh'arr u bit | è h'àghadh'arr u dit | è h'àghadh'arr u dèrr | è h'àghadh'arrt h'u |
| past | è h'àghadh'adharr u mic | è h'àghadh'adharr u dic | è h'àghadh'adharr u gha | è h'àghadh'adharr u bit | è h'àghadh'adharr u dit | è h'àghadh'adharr u dèrr | è h'àghadh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | è h'àghadh'ist u mic | è h'àghadh'ist u dic | è h'àghadh'ist u gha | è h'àghadh'ist u bit | è h'àghadh'ist u dit | è h'àghadh'ist u dèrr | è h'àghadh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | è h'àghadh'adhist u mic | è h'àghadh'adhist u dic | è h'àghadh'adhist u gha | è h'àghadh'adhist u bit | è h'àghadh'adhist u dit | è h'àghadh'adhist u dèrr | è h'àghadh'adhista h'u | |
Suppletive verbs
There are very few known suppletive verbs in Scots Norse, the main one being the copula vèr, and even it has been leveled by many speakers.
| present | past | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | vèr | — | ||||||
| participle | vèrann | vèradh | ||||||
| singular | plural | impersonal | ||||||
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |||
| pos. | pres. | arr mic | arr tic | arr ha | arr vit | arr tit | arr tèrr | arrt |
| past | varr mic | varr tic | varr ha | varr vit | varr tit | varr tèrr | varrt | |
| fut. | vèrist mic | vèrist tic | vèrist ha | vèrist vit | vèrist tit | vèrist tèrr | vèrista | |
| stat. | vèradhst mic | vèradhst tic | vèradhst ha | vèradhst vit | vèradhst tit | vèradhst tèrr | vèradhsta | |
| neg. | pres. | è h'arr mic | è h'arr tic | è h'arr ha | è h'arr vit | è h'arr tit | è h'arr tèrr | è h'arrt |
| past | è vharr mic | è vharr tic | è vharr ha | è vharr vit | è vharr tit | è vharr tèrr | è vharrt | |
| fut. | è vhèrist mic | è vhèrist tic | è vhèrist ha | è vhèrist vit | è vhèrist tit | è vhèrist tèrr | è vhèrista | |
| stat. | è vhèradhst mic | è vhèradhst tic | è vhèradhst ha | è vhèradhst vit | è vhèradhst tit | è vhèradhst tèrr | è vhèradhsta | |
| continuative | vèrann'arr u mic | vèrann'arr u dic | vèrann'arr u gha | vèrann'arr u bit | vèrann'arr u dit | vèrann'arr u dèrr | vèrann'arrt h'u | |
| perf. | pres. | vèradh'arr u mic | vèradh'arr u dic | vèradh'arr u gha | vèradh'arr u bit | vèradh'arr u dit | vèradh'arr u dèrr | vèradh'arrt h'u |
| past | vèradh'adharr u mic | vèradh'adharr u dic | vèradh'adharr u gha | vèradh'adharr u bit | vèradh'adharr u dit | vèradh'adharr u dèrr | vèradh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | vèradh'ist u mic | vèradh'ist u dic | vèradh'ist u gha | vèradh'ist u bit | vèradh'ist u dit | vèradh'ist u dèrr | vèradh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | vèradh'adhist u mic | vèradh'adhist u dic | vèradh'adhist u gha | vèradh'adhist u bit | vèradh'adhist u dit | vèradh'adhist u dèrr | vèradh'adhista h'u | |
| neg. perf. | pres. | è vhèradh'arr u mic | è vhèradh'arr u dic | è vhèradh'arr u gha | è vhèradh'arr u bit | è vhèradh'arr u dit | è vhèradh'arr u dèrr | è vhèradh'arrt h'u |
| past | è vhèradh'adharr u mic | è vhèradh'adharr u dic | è vhèradh'adharr u gha | è vhèradh'adharr u bit | è vhèradh'adharr u dit | è vhèradh'adharr u dèrr | è vhèradh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | è vhèradh'ist u mic | è vhèradh'ist u dic | è vhèradh'ist u gha | è vhèradh'ist u bit | è vhèradh'ist u dit | è vhèradh'ist u dèrr | è vhèradh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | è vhèradh'adhist u mic | è vhèradh'adhist u dic | è vhèradh'adhist u gha | è vhèradh'adhist u bit | è vhèradh'adhist u dit | è vhèradh'adhist u dèrr | è vhèradh'adhista h'u | |
"arr" and "varr" are the more prevalent forms, but the regularized forms "vèrarr" and "vèradharr" are also rather common.
Another suppletive verb is that of elsc, which has a suppletive reciprocal from the Old Norse verb "unna" (Scots Norse "uen")
| present | past | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| infinitive | elsc | — | ||||||
| participle | elscann | elscadh | ||||||
| singular | plural | impersonal | ||||||
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |||
| pos. | pres. | elscarr mic | elscarr tic | elscarr ha | elscarr vit | elscarr tit | elscarr tèrr | elscarrt |
| past | elscadharr mic | elscadharr tic | elscadharr ha | elscadharr vit | elscadharr tit | elscadharr tèrr | elscadharrt | |
| fut. | elscist mic | elscist tic | elscist ha | elscist vit | elscist tit | elscist tèrr | elscista | |
| stat. | elscadhst mic | elscadhst tic | elscadhst ha | elscadhst vit | elscadhst tit | elscadhst tèrr | elscadhsta | |
| neg. | pres. | è h'elscarr mic | è h'elscarr tic | è h'elscarr ha | è h'elscarr vit | è h'elscarr tit | è h'elscarr tèrr | è h'elscarrt |
| past | è h'elscadharr mic | è h'elscadharr tic | è h'elscadharr ha | è h'elscadharr vit | è h'elscadharr tit | è h'elscadharr tèrr | è h'elscadharrt | |
| fut. | è h'elscist mic | è h'elscist tic | è h'elscist ha | è h'elscist vit | è h'elscist tit | è h'elscist tèrr | è h'elscista | |
| stat. | è h'elscadhst mic | è h'elscadhst tic | è h'elscadhst ha | è h'elscadhst vit | è h'elscadhst tit | è h'elscadhst tèrr | è h'elscadhsta | |
| continuative | elscann'arr u mic | elscann'arr u dic | elscann'arr u gha | elscann'arr u bit | elscann'arr u dit | elscann'arr u dèrr | elscann'arrt h'u | |
| perf. | pres. | elscadh'arr u mic | elscadh'arr u dic | elscadh'arr u gha | elscadh'arr u bit | elscadh'arr u dit | elscadh'arr u dèrr | elscadh'arrt h'u |
| past | elscadh'adharr u mic | elscadh'adharr u dic | elscadh'adharr u gha | elscadh'adharr u bit | elscadh'adharr u dit | elscadh'adharr u dèrr | elscadh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | elscadh'ist u mic | elscadh'ist u dic | elscadh'ist u gha | elscadh'ist u bit | elscadh'ist u dit | elscadh'ist u dèrr | elscadh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | elscadh'adhist u mic | elscadh'adhist u dic | elscadh'adhist u gha | elscadh'adhist u bit | elscadh'adhist u dit | elscadh'adhist u dèrr | elscadh'adhista h'u | |
| neg. perf. | pres. | è h'elscadh'arr u mic | è h'elscadh'arr u dic | è h'elscadh'arr u gha | è h'elscadh'arr u bit | è h'elscadh'arr u dit | è h'elscadh'arr u dèrr | è h'elscadh'arrt h'u |
| past | è h'elscadh'adharr u mic | è h'elscadh'adharr u dic | è h'elscadh'adharr u gha | è h'elscadh'adharr u bit | è h'elscadh'adharr u dit | è h'elscadh'adharr u dèrr | è h'elscadh'adharrt h'u | |
| fut. | è h'elscadh'ist u mic | è h'elscadh'ist u dic | è h'elscadh'ist u gha | è h'elscadh'ist u bit | è h'elscadh'ist u dit | è h'elscadh'ist u dèrr | è h'elscadh'ista h'u | |
| stat. | è h'elscadh'adhist u mic | è h'elscadh'adhist u dic | è h'elscadh'adhist u gha | è h'elscadh'adhist u bit | è h'elscadh'adhist u dit | è h'elscadh'adhist u dèrr | è h'elscadh'adhista h'u | |
Syntax
Texts
UDHR Article 1
Original (English)
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
Old Norse (modern translation)
Allir menn eru bornir frjálsir ok jafnir at virðingu ok réttum. Þeir eru allir viti gœddir ok samvizku, ok skulu gøra hvárr til annars bróðurliga.
Scots Norse
arr manarr al bhori mhriàl h-o hiavn, vèrann vhirrdhing o rhèt h-atharr. vèrann gaèdhadh h-o shanvisc h-atharr, o shcùl ghèor hanna thil bròdhligh.
arr manarr al bhori mhriàl h-o hiavn, vèrann vhirrdhing o rhèt h-atharr. vèrann gaèdhadh h-o shanvisc h-atharr, o shcùl ghèor hanna thil bròdhligh.
English translation
- lit: "all men are born free and equal, being dignity and rights at them. being reason and conscience at them, and should act to brotherhood at each other"
- "all men are born free and equal, having dignity and rights. they have reason and conscience, and should act to eachother as a brotherhood"
Deor
|
Old English
|
Scots Norse
|
(lines with "-" are yet to be translated)
Lexical comparison
| Leipzig-Jakarta List | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rank | English | Old Norse | Scots Norse | Icelandic | Swedish | |||
| 1 | fire | eldr | ald /ˈæʎdʲ/ | eldur | eld | |||
| 2 | nose | nǫs | no /ˈnˠɔ/ | nös | nas | |||
| 3 | to go | ganga | gang /ˈɟæŋ̟/ | ganga | gånga | |||
| 4 | water | vatn | vat /ˈvʲætʲ/ | vatn | vatten | |||
| 5 | mouth | (body) munnr (river) mynni (river) óss |
(body) muenn /ˈmˠɤɲ/ (river) mainn /ˈmiɲ/ |
|||||
| 6 | tongue | tunga | tueng /ˈtˠɤŋ̟/ | |||||
| 7 | blood | blóð | blòd /ˈbˠɫodˠ/ | |||||
| 8 | bone | bein | bè /ˈbʲe/ | |||||
| 9 | 2sg pronoun (you) | þú | tù /ˈtˠu/ | |||||
| 10 | root | rót | ròt /ˈrˠotˠ/ | |||||
| 11 | to come (move) | koma | còem /ˈkomʲ/ | |||||
| 12 | breast | brjóst | briòst /ˈbʲrʲosˠ(tˠ)/ | |||||
| 13 | rain | regn | rei /ˈrʲɛː/ | |||||
| 14 | 1sg pronoun (I) | ek | e /ɛɛ/ | |||||
| 15 | name | nafn | nav /ˈnʲæ/ | |||||
| 16 | louse (Phthirapteron) | |||||||
| 17 | wing | |||||||
| 18 | flesh/meat | |||||||
| 19 | arm/hand | |||||||
| 20 | fly (Dipteron) | |||||||
| 21 | night (time) | nátt | nàtt /ˈnot/ | |||||
| 22 | ear | |||||||
| 23 | neck | |||||||
| 24 | far (prep.) | |||||||
| 25 | to do/make | |||||||
| 26 | house/structure | |||||||
| 27 | stone/rock (singular) | |||||||
| 28 | bitter | |||||||
| 29 | to say | tala | tàel /ˈtoʎ/ | |||||
| 30 | tooth | |||||||
| 31 | hair | |||||||
| 32 | big | |||||||
| 33 | one (number) | einn | è /ˈe/ | |||||
| 34 | who? | |||||||
| 35 | 3sg pronoun (they) | hann (m) hǫ́n (f) þat (n) |
ha (m) /ˈha/ hò (f) /ˈxo/ | |||||
| 36 | to hit/beat | |||||||
| 37 | leg/foot | |||||||
| 38 | horn | |||||||
| 39 | this (pron.) | sá | tà /ˈto/ | |||||
| 40 | fish | fiskr | fisc /ˈfʲɪʃc/ | |||||
| 41 | yesterday | |||||||
| 42 | to drink | |||||||
| 43 | black (color) | |||||||
| 44 | navel | |||||||
| 45 | to stand | |||||||
| 46 | to bite | |||||||
| 47 | back (body) | |||||||
| 48 | wind | |||||||
| 49 | smoke (substance) | |||||||
| 50 | what? | |||||||
| 51 | child (kin term) | |||||||
| 52 | egg | |||||||
| 53 | to give | |||||||
| 54 | new (adj.) | |||||||
| 55 | to burn (intr.) | |||||||
| 56 | not (adj./adv.) | eigi (verbal) -at |
ègh /eʝ/ (verbal) -(a)t /(ə)tʲ/ | |||||
| 57 | good | |||||||
| 58 | to know | kunna (a person) kenna |
cuen /ˈkɤ̃/ (a person) cen /ˈcɛ̃/ | |||||
| 59 | knee | |||||||
| 60 | sand | |||||||
| 61 | to laugh | |||||||
| 62 | to hear | |||||||
| 63 | soil | |||||||
| 64 | leaf | |||||||
| 65 | red (color) | |||||||
| 66 | liver (organ) | |||||||
| 67 | to hide | |||||||
| 68 | skin/hide | feldr (animal) skinn (general) húð |
feld /ˈfʲɛʎdʲ/ (animal) sci /ˈʃcɪ/ (general) hùd /ˈxudˠ/ | |||||
| 69 | to suck | |||||||
| 70 | to carry | |||||||
| 71 | ant (Formid) | |||||||
| 72 | heavy | |||||||
| 73 | to take | |||||||
| 74 | old | |||||||
| 75 | to eat | eta | èt /ˈetʲ/ | |||||
| 76 | thigh | |||||||
| 77 | thick | |||||||
| 78 | long (spacially) | |||||||
| 79 | to blow | |||||||
| 80 | wood | |||||||
| 81 | to run | |||||||
| 82 | to fall | |||||||
| 83 | eye (body-part) | |||||||
| 84 | ash | |||||||
| 85 | tail | |||||||
| 86 | dog | hundr rakki |
huenn /ˈxɤɲ/ (archaic) rac /ˈrʲæc/ (affectionate) cù /ˈku/ |
hundur rakki |
hund rakka | |||
| 87 | to cry/weep | |||||||
| 88 | to tie | |||||||
| 89 | to see | |||||||
| 90 | sweet | |||||||
| 91 | rope | |||||||
| 92 | shade/shadow | |||||||
| 93 | bird | fugl | fùil /ˈfˠɯʎ/ | |||||
| 94 | salt | |||||||
| 95 | small | |||||||
| 96 | wide | |||||||
| 97 | star | |||||||
| 98 | in | í | ì /i/ | |||||
| 99 | hard (materially) | |||||||
| 100 | to crush/grind | |||||||