ABSTRACT

Scandinavia is used in both a wide sense, which includes several countries in the region in northern Europe, and in a narrow sense, which includes the three countries Denmark, Norway and Sweden only. The latter meaning is normally favoured by the larger dictionaries.1 For the purpose of the present chapter, the narrow sense of the term will be used, the most important reason being that the national languages of these countries, Danish, Norwegian and Swedish, are closely related, and actually mutually intelligible, so that the linguistic conditions for the learning and use of English in these communities may be comparable.2These three languages are, in fact, often considered to be dialects of the same language. The languages in Scandinavia are used by approximately 19 million mother tongue speakers. Thus from an international, comparative point of view they are ‘small’ languages.