Hi there,

British spoken in Scandinavia/Norway+Sweden ?

"while their language is more. like the British"

http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Tac.+Ger.+45

Or

http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%
3A1999.02.0083&query=chapter%3D%2345&layout=&loc=44

"Æsa" gerir næst "æst". As I "æsi" you then you become "æst"

"Æs" rimes with nice. You spell Iceland sounds as "Æsland"

See "Gæs" is also "Gás" that is a goose.
See rhyme between tongues.

See also the Iceni [æsin(í)] tribe :
"In AD 60, London was burnt to the ground by the forces of Queen
Boudicca of the Iceni tribe (from modern Norfolk), when she led a
major revolt against Roman rule. The governor, Suetonius Paulinus,
who was busy exterminating the Druids in North Wales, marched his
troops south in an attempt to save London but, seeing the size of
Boudicca's approaching army, decided he could not mount an adequate
defence and evacuated the city instead. Not everyone managed to
escape though and many were massacred. Though the governors'
military duties kept them mostly on the British frontier, it seems
likely that they spent the winter months in London, the most
convenient city from which to reach any part of Britain or the
continental Empire. From the 250s, an altar inscription records that
Governor Marcus Martiannius Pulcher rebuilt the Temple of Isis in
the city; and a speculator, from his or a subsequent governor's
staff, was buried on Ludgate Hill. An elaborate late 1st century
building, with large reception rooms and offices, has been partially
excavated beneath Cannon Street Station. It may have been the
Governor's Palace. A second palatial building was recently
discovered in the smaller trading settlement at Southwark, in the
marshes south of the river."


Thanks Uoden

Boudicca or "BótInga"
Icelandic Á was it transformed into "amb" as in amber.
Do "á" and "amb" share figurative meaning?
"Á" sounds as "ow" in How.
Icelandic includes the naturally long vowel sounds in English.