When did they stop using Old Norse?

They didn't stop using Old Norse abruptly; it gradually evolved into modern North Germanic languages (Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Faroese) between the 13th and 15th centuries, but Iceland's isolated island status preserved Old Norse more closely, while mainland Scandinavian languages were influenced by other tongues, like Low German, especially after the Black Death disrupted writing traditions.
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When did Old Norse stop being used?

Old Norse language, classical North Germanic language used from roughly 1150 to 1350. It is the literary language of the Icelandic sagas, skaldic poems, and Eddas.
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Does anyone speak Old Norse anymore?

No, Old Norse is not spoken as a native language today; it's a dead language that evolved into modern Scandinavian languages like Icelandic, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, and Faroese, with Icelandic being the closest living relative because it changed the least. While some enthusiasts and scholars study or use constructed forms, it's not a living tongue for daily communication, having transitioned into these distinct modern tongues between the 13th and 15th centuries.
 
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Can modern Norwegians understand Old Norse?

Today Old Norse has developed into the modern North Germanic languages Icelandic, Faroese, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, and other North Germanic varieties of which Norwegian, Danish and Swedish retain considerable mutual intelligibility while Icelandic remains the closest to Old Norse.
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What language replaced Old Norse?

Icelandic, an Indo-European language, is based on Old Norse, which later evolved into Old Icelandic and ultimately became Modern Icelandic.
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OLD NORSE IN ENGLISH: The words the Vikings left behind

What country still speaks Old Norse?

Do people still speak Old Norse? The language of Old Norse is no longer spoken today. However, elements of Old Norse live on in the modern North Germanic languages of Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Faroese, and Icelandic. Scholars believe that the modern Icelandic language is the closest modern language to Old Norse.
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Does Viking Bloodline still exist?

Modern-day descendants of Vikings are found across Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland), the British Isles (especially northern England, Scotland, Ireland), Normandy (France), and parts of Eastern Europe (Russia/Ukraine), with millions worldwide having some Norse ancestry due to Viking expansion and settlement, particularly evident in genetic studies showing significant Viking DNA in these regions. 
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Is anyone fluent in Old Norse?

Modern Icelanders can understand a good amount of Old Norse, but not 100% due to dialect/inflection & the changing of meanings. The Sagas, which were written in Old Norse do contain dialogue, but it is nearly impossible to create a living language from the written sources we have available.
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Do Norwegians say "hi hi"?

Norwegians typically greet each other by saying hei (hello in Norwegian) or god morgen (good morning in Norwegian) depending on whether the situation is informal or formal. They will then ask each other (Hvordan) står det til? (how are you?). In an informal setting, you can just say står til?.
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Can Germans and Swedes understand each other?

Swedish speakers may also understand a fair bit of German. Both languages have common roots, which are reflected in their similar vocabularies. But there are also considerable differences between German and Swedish — especially in terms of grammar.
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What is the #1 hardest language to learn in the world?

There's no single "number one" hardest language, as difficulty depends on your native tongue, but Mandarin Chinese, Arabic, Japanese, and Korean consistently rank highest for English speakers due to tonal systems (Chinese), complex writing (Japanese, Chinese), right-to-left script (Arabic), or unique grammar/alphabet (Korean). Japanese is often cited as the toughest due to its three interwoven writing systems (Kanji, Hiragana, Katakana). 
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How would you say hello in Old Norse?

According to Store norske leksikon, the originally Norse greeting “heill ok sæll” was—adjusted to modern orthography and pronunciation—adopted as “heil og sæl” by the political party Nasjonal Samling.
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Are Vikings celtic or Nordic?

Vikings were a seafaring people originally from Scandinavia (present-day Denmark, Norway, and Sweden), who from the late 8th to the late 11th centuries raided, pirated, traded, and settled throughout parts of Europe.
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Did Vikings engage in homosexuality?

Yes, there were likely gay people among the Vikings, but their society viewed male homosexuality negatively, associating it with weakness, effeminacy, and a lack of honor, though same-sex acts weren't necessarily rare if performed by the "active" partner who remained dominant. Viking identity centered on family, honor, and fulfilling traditional roles (marrying, having children), so anyone shunning these roles faced legal or social penalties, with strong stigma against submissive male roles, but less focus on female same-sex relationships in sagas.
 
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What current language is closest to Old Norse?

Modern Icelandic is the closest language to Old Norse, retaining much of its grammar, vocabulary, and structure, allowing modern Icelanders to read sagas with relative ease, while Faroese is also very similar; Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish (Scandinavian languages) have diverged more significantly due to outside influences like Middle Low German.
 
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Is Swedish closer to Dutch or German?

🇸🇪 Swedish = North Germanic (closer to Danish and Norwegian) 🇳🇱 Dutch= West Germanic (closer to English and German)
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How is ø pronounced in Norwegian?

The Norwegian 'ø' sound (close-mid front rounded vowel) is similar to the vowel in the English words "bird" or "burn," but with more rounded lips, like saying "ee" or "eh" with pursed lips, or the 'eu' in French "bleu," often described as a mix of "eh" and "oo". To make the sound, form your mouth as if saying "oo," but push your tongue forward and try to say "eh," creating a sound in the front of your mouth with rounded lips.
 
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What does takk skal mean?

“Takk skal du ha” means “thanks you shall have”. Seems to me it's just an antiquated though lovely way of saying thanks that may have been specific to her time, her family, her religion, or her region.
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What does "uff da" mean in Norwegian slang?

"Uff da" is a Norwegian exclamation expressing mild dismay, sympathy, surprise, or disappointment, similar to "oops," "oh dear," "good grief," or "that's too bad," often used for minor mishaps but also for bigger events, showing a range from empathy to slight exasperation, especially in Scandinavian-American communities. It's a versatile phrase that conveys "that's unfortunate" without being overly dramatic. 
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Are Vikings Slavic or Nordic?

The scholarly consensus holds that they were originally Norsemen, mainly originating from present-day Sweden, who settled and ruled along the river-routes between the Baltic and the Black Sea from around the 8th to 11th centuries AD.
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How do you say "I love you" in Old Norse?

To say "I love you" in Old Norse, the most common and direct translation is "Ek ann þér", meaning "I love you," often found on runestones and objects as a declaration, or you can say "Ek elska þik" which is closer to modern Icelandic/Norse. Other expressions include "Ást mín" (My love/darling) or "Unnasta mín" (My beloved). 
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What is the closest language to Old Norse on Duolingo?

Icelandic is the closest to Norse. But if you want to be able to read the stuff closest to the Viking era, I'd say just go ahead and learn Old Norse.
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Were Vikings 100% white?

Most Vikings had brown skin and dark eyes and hair, and their "alien" genes show that they may have come from Asia and southern Europe even before the Viking Age flourished.
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