Old East Norse

dialect of Old Norse

Old East Norse was a dialect of Old Norse which evolved into the languages Old Danish and Old Swedish from the 9th century to the 12th century.

Old East Norse
ᛑᚣᚿ𐊖ᚴ
  Old East Norse
Pronunciation[d̪ɒnsk]
RegionDenmark, Sweden, England, Normandy, the Volga and places in-between
Era9th-12th century
Early forms
Runic, later Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
GlottologNone
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History

change

Between 800 and 1100, East Norse is in Sweden called Runic Swedish and in Denmark Runic Danish. The use of Swedish and Danish is not for linguistic reasons as the differences between them are minute at best during the more ancient stages of this dialect group. Changes had a tendency to occur earlier in the Danish region and until this day many Old Danish changes have still not taken place in modern Swedish rendering Swedish as the more archaic out of the two concerning both the ancient and the modern languages, sometimes by a profound margin but in all differences are still minute. They are called runic because the body of text appears in runes. Runic Old East Norse is characteristically archaic in form, especially Swedish (which is still true for modern Swedish compared to Danish). In essence it matches or surpasses the archaicness of post-runic Old West Norse which in its turn is generally more archaic than post-runic Old East Norse. While typically "Eastern" in structure, many later post-runic changes and trademarks of EON had yet to happen.

Development from Old Norse

change

The combinations -mp-, -nt-, and -nk- mostly merged to -pp-, -tt- and -kk- in Old West Norse at around the 7th century, marking the first distinction between the Eastern and Western dialects. The following table illustrates this (note the mutual influence of East and West Norse on each other):

English Northish Faroese Icelandic Old East Norse Proto-Norse Old West Norse Swedish Danish Dano-Norwegian
mushroom sopp soppur sveppur swǫppʀ *swampu svampr svamp svamp sopp
steep bratt brattur brattur brattʀ *brantaz brantr brant brat bratt
widow enkje einkja, arch. ekkja ekkja ekkja *ain(a)kjōn ænkja änka enke enke
shrinke kreppe kreppa kreppa kreppa *krimpan krimpa krympa krympe krympe
sprinte sprette spretta spretta spretta *sprintan sprinta spritta, dial. sprinta sprætte sprette
sinke søkke søkka sökkva søkkva *sankwian sænkva sjunka synke synke