About Finnish Language
According to Wikipedia.org, Finnish is a Uralic language of the Finnic branch. It is spoken by the majority of the population in Finland. It is also spoken by ethnic Finns outside Finland. Finnish is the official language of Finland. In Sweden, both Finnish and Meänkieli are official minority languages. Finnish, is spoken in the Norwegian county Troms of Finnmark and is spoken by a minority group of Finnish descent. Finnish uses suffixal affixation. The Nouns, adjectives, pronouns, numerals, and verbs depending on their role in the sentence. Sentences are formed with the subject-verb-object word order and have extensive use of inflection. Word order variations have differences in information structure. The orthography is a Latin-script alphabet and it is derived from the alphabet. The Vowel length and consonant length in Finnish are distinguished, and there is a range of diphthongs in Finnish.
About Norwegian Language
According to Wikipedia.org, Norwegian is a North German language that is the official language in Norway. The dialect continuum of this language is similar to that of Swedish and Danish. It features local as well as regional varieties that are easy to distinguish. The native speakers are 5.32 million. This language is written in many standard forms but Nynorsk is the official one. Norwegian belongs to Indo-European and German language families. The retroflex consonants feature only in the Eastern dialect. Even the dialect of Northwestern Norwegian is quite similar to Spanish. The native speakers have a pitch accent that has two distinctive patterns just like Swedish. All the two-syllable words have identical pronunciations. As Norwegian doesn’t have accent marks it is pronounced with a simple tone.