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Norse vs berserk

berserk vs Norse

Norse and berserk both are nouns.

Norse and berserk both are adjectives.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
Norse Yes Yes No No
berserk Yes Yes No No
As nouns, berserk is a hyponym of Norse; that is, berserk is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than Norse:
  • Norse: an inhabitant of Scandinavia
  • berserk: one of the ancient Norse warriors legendary for working themselves into a frenzy before a battle and fighting with reckless savagery and insane fury
Other hyponyms of Norse include Viking, berserker.
Norse (noun) berserk (noun)
the northern family of Germanic languages that are spoken in Scandinavia and Iceland one of the ancient Norse warriors legendary for working themselves into a frenzy before a battle and fighting with reckless savagery and insane fury
a native or inhabitant of Norway
an inhabitant of Scandinavia
Norse (adjective) berserk (adjective)
of or relating to Norway or its people or culture or language wildly frenzied and out of control
of or relating to Scandinavia or its peoples or cultures
Difference between Norse and berserk

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