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Norwegian and singer
* 1947 – Finn Kalvik, Norwegian singer and composer
* 1995 – Malin Reitan, Norwegian singer
* 1987 – Sandra Lyng Haugen, Norwegian singer
* 1993 – Euronymous, Norwegian singer, guitarist, and producer ( Mayhem ) ( b. 1968 )
* 1951 – Jan Eggum, Norwegian singer and songwriter
* 1976 – Liv Kristine, Norwegian singer ( Leaves ' Eyes )
* 1986 – Maria Mena, Norwegian singer
* 1970 – Karoline Krüger, Norwegian singer
* 1985 – Maria Arredondo, Norwegian singer
* 1956 – Hanne Krogh, Norwegian singer ( Bobbysocks )
* 1949 – Åse Kleveland, Norwegian singer and politician
* 1976 – Shagrath, Norwegian singer ( Dimmu Borgir )
* 1926 – Arne Bendiksen, Norwegian singer and songwriter ( d. 2009 )
* Tone Damli Aaberge, Norwegian singer
Norwegian singer and songwriter, Kate Havnevik, is a classically trained music, but also incorporates Trip-Hop in her debut album Melankton.
Norwegian band Kaizers Orchestra have a song inspired by lead singer Janove Ottesen's love of White Russians, entitled " Min Kvite Russer ".
** Christian Ingebrigtsen, Norwegian singer ( A1 )
** Jan Eggum, Norwegian singer and songwriter
* June 24 – Sissel Kyrkjebø, Norwegian singer
* November 15 – Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Norwegian rock singer ( ABBA )
* April 10 – Jan Werner Danielsen, Norwegian singer ( d. 2006 )
** Morten Harket, Norwegian rock singer ( a-ha )
* February 19 – Sven Erik Kristiansen Norwegian Black metal and hardcore punk singer ( Maniac )
* October 2 – Lene Nystrøm, Norwegian singer ( Aqua )
** Vibeke Stene, Norwegian rock singer ( Tristania )

Norwegian and /
In Norwegian, caraway is called both karve and kummin / kømming while cumin is spisskummen, from the word spise, to eat.
Examples of cognates in Indo-European languages are the words night ( English ), nuit ( French ), Nacht ( German ), nacht ( Dutch ), nag ( Afrikaans ), nicht ( Scots ), natt ( Swedish, Norwegian ), nat ( Danish ), nátt ( Faroese ), nótt ( Icelandic ), noc ( Czech, Slovak, Polish ), ночь, noch ( Russian ), ноќ, noć ( Macedonian ), нощ, nosht ( Bulgarian ), ніч, nich ( Ukrainian ), ноч, noch / noč ( Belarusian ), noč ( Slovene ), noć ( Serbo-Croatian ), νύξ, nyx ( Ancient Greek, νύχτα / nyhta in Modern Greek ), nox ( Latin ), nakt-( Sanskrit ), natë ( Albanian ), noche ( Spanish ), nos ( Welsh ), nueche ( Asturian ), noite ( Portuguese and Galician ), notte ( Italian ), nit ( Catalan ), noapte ( Romanian ), nakts ( Latvian ) and naktis ( Lithuanian ), all meaning " night " and derived from the Proto-Indo-European ( PIE ), " night ".
Another Indo-European example is star ( English ), str-( Sanskrit ), tara ( Hindi-Urdu ), étoile ( French ), ἀστήρ ( astēr ) ( Greek or ἀστέρι / ἄστρο, asteri / astro in Modern Greek ), stella ( Italian ), aster ( Latin ) stea ( Romanian and Venetian ), stairno ( Gothic ), astl ( Armenian ), Stern ( German ), ster ( Dutch and Afrikaans ), starn ( Scots ), stjerne ( Norwegian and Danish ), stjarna ( Icelandic ), stjärna ( Swedish ), stjørna ( Faroese ), setāre ( Persian ), stoorei ( Pashto ), seren ( Welsh ), steren ( Cornish ), estel ( Catalan ), estrella Spanish, estrella Asturian and Leonese, estrela ( Portuguese and Galician ) and estêre or stêrk ( Kurdish ), from the PIE, " star ".
The word " Slalom " is from the Morgedal / Seljord dialect of Norwegian slalåm: " sla ," meaning slightly inclining hillside, and " låm ," meaning track after skis.
Dolmens are known by a variety of names in other languages including dolmain ( Irish ), cromlech ( Welsh ), anta ( Portuguese and Galician ), Hünengrab / Hünenbett ( German ), Adamra ( Abkhazian ), Ispun ( Circassian ), Hunebed ( Dutch ), dysse ( Danish and Norwegian ), dös ( Swedish ), and goindol ( Korean ).
* Norway: Sproing Award ( Norsk Tegneserieforum / Norwegian Comics Forum ).
As well as TU / e and Delft University of Technology, the top 10 also includes two universities in Japan ( Tokyo Institute of Technology and Keio University in Tokyo ), two in Sweden ( University of Gothenburg and KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm ), and one each in Denmark ( DTU Technical University of Denmark in Lyngby ), Finland ( University of Helsinki ), Norway ( Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim ) and the USA ( Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York ).
* Estonian / Finnish ei ( no, not ), Etruscan ei ( no, not ), and Norwegian ei / Swedish ej ( not )
The word is continued in German Deutsch ( meaning German ), English " Dutch ", Dutch Duits and Diets ( the latter referring to the historic name for Dutch or Middle Dutch, the former meaning German ), Italian tedesco ( meaning German ), Swedish / Danish / Norwegian tysk ( meaning German ) and Middle Low German dudesch meaning both Low German and the whole of Dutch / German / Low German, as well its descendant, modern Low German dütsch, meaning only Standard High German.
" Norwegian Wood " b / w " I Can't Wait To Love You " ( Liberty 55856 ) ( Cancelled )-( JB )
" Popsicle " b / w " Norwegian Wood " ( Liberty 55886 )-BB No. 21, CB No. 24-( JB )
Municipalities are sometimes referred to as " communes " ( for example, French commune, Spanish ayuntamiento, Italian comune, Romanian comună, Swedish kommun Norwegian / Danish kommune and German Kommune ).
The Nobel Prize (, Swedish definite form, singular: Nobelpriset ; Norwegian: Nobelprisen ) is a set of annual international awards bestowed in a number of categories by Scandinavian committees in recognition of cultural and / or scientific advances.
Faroese retains many similarities but is influenced by Danish, Norwegian, and Gaelic ( Scottish and / or Irish ).
There is another contender for the discoverer of Iceland: Naddoddr, a Norwegian / Faeroese Viking explorer.
* Grímur Kamban, a Norwegian or Norwegian / Irish Viking who around 825 was, according to the Færeyinga Saga, the first Nordic settler in the Faeroes.
* Naddoddr, a Norwegian / Faeroese Viking explorer.
* Rollo of Normandy, founder and first ruler of the Viking principality of Normandy ( also known as Hrolf Ganger in Icelandic / Norwegian sagas ).

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