Norwegian Lessons in Glasgow. Learn Norwegian
Language Trainers Norwegian courses are specifically developed after an initial meeting to discuss learners' needs and aims. Your qualified, native-speaking trainer will provide materials and cover areas of particular interest to you or your company. Individuals, pairs, and small groups are all catered for, and classes tailored to fit the learners. Lessons are arranged for a time that is convenient for you (morning, afternoon, evening; work days or weekends), and can be held at your home or office.
One-to-one General/Business
Norwegian Course in Glasgow
It's no problem if you need to take Norwegian lessons specifically for personal use or to help with your career - our trainers mould the lesson plan to your precise needs.
General Norwegian courses will provide you with enough grammar and vocabulary to allow you to converse with native speakers, and form a strong basis for further learning. A Business course will focus on business protocol in Norwegian, and later on reading and writing will become more important.
Courses are, however, tailor-made - you cover in your lessons what you need to cover. Most students taking a Business Norwegian course will gain telephone and email expertise, as well as general conversation skills. Likewise, a General course can include specific elements that are integral to your needs, for example if you need vocabulary specific to buying property overseas.
Typical learners who choose our Business courses are import/export professionals, agents for multi-national companies, and those involved with foreign governments and universities. General courses in Norwegian suit those hoping to emigrate to foreign shores, people with a view to travel to countries where Norwegian is the vernacular tongue, those with a keen interest in Norwegian culture and language, and people with foreign spouses.
› Two-to-One and Small Group - Norwegian Course in Glasgow (closed group)
Glasgow Facts
- Main Rivers in Glasgow: River Clyde
- Most desirable neighbourhoods in Glasgow: The West End
- Population of Glasgow: 612000
- Tourist Attractions in Glasgow: Glasgow Art Gallery
- Top restaurants in Glasgow: The Left Bank
Info about Norwegian
Modern Greek is the 5th stage of the evolution of the Hellenic language, and is spoken mainly in Greece and Cyprus; though there are Greek-speaking communities dotted all around the world, making approximately 17 million speakers worldwide.
The most obvious difference between Greek and English is the Greek alphabet, which may look a little scary at first, but actually shares a great many similarities with the standard Roman alphabet. In many ways Modern Greek is a watered-down version of its ancient counterpart, leaving behind many grammatical features, yet few enough for most students of Ancient Greek to pick up Modern Greek relatively quickly.
Language Blog
Take a break, improve the internetSoftware developers, psychologists, sociologists, linguists, designers. Many people of different occupations spend a lot of time trying to work out how people's brains work, what things we associate... » Read More
Our Twitter
Paula, Extremely happy with the course. Please can you send me pricing for the courses so I can arrange with HHRR. Best, Rocio
Request a Quotation
We will send you a quote within one working day of your enquiry.













