No. It is Germanic, from the Anglo Saxons.
Sibylle Hug has written: 'Scandinavian loanwords and their equivalents in Middle English' -- subject(s): English language, Foreign words and phrases, Influence on English, Scandinavian, Scandinavian languages
Modern English comes immediately from Middle English, the language of Chaucer. That derived from Old English or Anglo-Saxon, the language of Beowulf. That language, little more than a Germanic dialect, derived from Common Germanic, the common language of all Germanic languages (Dutch, Friese, German, Scandinavian...).
If you mean Lumpier, it was possibly adopted into the English language from a 13th century Scandinavian word 'lumpe'. Otherwise the origin is unknown
That would probably be most commonly be Anglo-Saxon or Old English; such words as "love", "warmth", "friend", "dear", "bliss" are from it. "Happy" and "guest" are from Scandinavian; "joy" and "peace" are from Old French.
Germanic, Scandinavian, Anglo-Saxon, and Greek. Plus many other languages.
Julius Forssman has written: 'Skandinavische Spuren in der altrussischen Sprache und Dichtung' -- subject(s): Comparative Literature, Foreign words and phrases, Old Russian, Old Russian and Scandinavian, Russian, Russian language, Scandinavian, Scandinavian and Russian
Old Norse prose is most similar to Old English and other Germanic languages due to their common linguistic heritage. It also shows some similarities with modern Scandinavian languages like Icelandic and Norwegian.
The English language has its roots in Anglo-Saxon, old French, old German and Latin.
It is a branch of the Indo European group of languages, including German, Dutch, English, Scandinavian languages, Afrikaans, Flemish, Frisian and the extinct Gothic language
It is a branch of the Indo European group of languages, including German, Dutch, English, Scandinavian languages, Afrikaans, Flemish, Frisian and the extinct Gothic language
It is of unknown Scandinavian origin.Middle English and Scandinavian
Scandinavian is not a language. It refers to a group of languages, such as Norwegian, Danish, Swedish and Icelandic.