A useful learning tool for students of the Norwegian language, the English-Norwegian Glossary contains more than 4000 English entries with their commonly used Norwegian counterparts. Using the Norwegian-English glossary from the textbook Norsk, Nordmenn, og Norge as the basis for this new English-Norwegian glossary, Brenda Ekstrom provides the most comprehensive and convenient glossary now in print. Norwegian nouns are accompanied by their appropriate articles (ei, en, or et) and the indefinite and definite plural forms whenever declension is irregular. Verbs are conjugated in present, past, and present perfect tenses. Adjectives and adverbs are listed with their plural forms and comparative degrees. All entries refer to the textbook chapters in which they first appear, and many phrases, clauses, and idioms also appear in the glossary. The volume also contains two appendixes: a listing of proper nouns and adjectives that appear in the text book, including the names of particular people, places, and events and a convenient reference of days of the week, months of the year, and numbers (cardinal and ordinal).
A useful learning tool for students of the Norwegian language, the English-Norwegian Glossary contains more than 4000 English entries with their commonly used Norwegian counterparts. Using the Norwegian-English glossary from the textbook Norsk, Nordmenn, og Norge as the basis for this new English-Norwegian glossary, Brenda Ekstrom provides the most comprehensive and convenient glossary now in print. Norwegian nouns are accompanied by their appropriate articles (ei, en, or et) and the indefinite and definite plural forms whenever declension is irregular. Verbs are conjugated in present, past, and present perfect tenses. Adjectives and adverbs are listed with their plural forms and comparative degrees. All entries refer to the textbook chapters in which they first appear, and many phrases, clauses, and idioms also appear in the glossary. The volume also contains two appendixes: a listing of proper nouns and adjectives that appear in the text book, including the names of particular people, places, and events and a convenient reference of days of the week, months of the year, and numbers (cardinal and ordinal).
As a little girl, author Brenda Prater Sellers traipsed around Prater Flats in Louisville, Tennessee, thinking she was Ansel Adams with her first, clunky, black-and-white Polaroid that didn’t work half the time. The love of that camera and the unknown turned her into not only an overzealous wannabe photographer but into a Southern, Mountain Dew-driven, M&M eating, adrenaline-seeking adventurer, skydiver, and climber of Mount Everest. In You Slept Where? she shares her story about a businesswoman who is also a wife, mother, and a farmer’s daughter pursuing a childhood dream of being published in National Geographic, while coping with life’s struggles of her parents’ eldercare. Sellers also tells about her experiences and mishaps in bizarre locations and staying at the world’s most unique places: an underwater hotel, an ice hotel, sleeping with polar bears, or sleeping in wigwams along Route 66. Imagine the movies Miss Congeniality meets National Lampoon’s Vacation in her version of Planes, Trains and Automobiles. With cost-saving travel tips and other advice included, You Slept Where? provides insight into one woman’s crazy adventures while encouraging others to create their own bucket list.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.