Submitted by tangledwebgenealogy t3_105dw9f in history
Memento-Epstein t1_j3lx1cs wrote
Reply to comment by CheeseandChili in Archaeologists Unearth Viking Hall in Denmark by tangledwebgenealogy
Yup. "Have" (two syllables; ha-ve) is a fancy word for garden in Norway. Today however, everyone other than the elderly in the fancy parts of Oslo says "hage".
I believe the Norwegian have and the dutch hof is related.
Frisia especially (maybe the rest of the country as well?) were originally populated by pre-viking age scandinavians (germanics? norsemen? I don't know what the distinctions are sadly), who clearly brought their language with them, in the same sense that even the saxons that populated England in the viking age could with relative ease understand norse and vice versa. Which I assume was useful in later trade and settlements.
So, my logic goes that if germanic spread from saxony to England, it is no far stretch to assume that norse words also took the relative short jump down the coast to the trading areas of Frisia.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfGRuWTV_rg&t=
I recently watched this series, and Frisia was heavily settled by scandinavic peoples at a certain point.
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