Top 185 Norway Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Norway quotes.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Her hatred glittered irresistibly. I could see it, the jewel, it was sapphire, it was the cold lakes of Norway.
I want to travel. Maybe I'll end up living in Norway, making cakes.
When we were kids, Stoke was massive in Norway. — © Morten Harket
When we were kids, Stoke was massive in Norway.
I Have traveled 201 countries including Hell (Norway), and the strangest thing I've seenwas man
I'm from Norway, but I always felt like I'd grown up with British culture.
I met my wife in Latvia 17 or 18 years ago, moved over to Norway in 2003 or 2004 and after a couple of years living there, I was able to represent Norway as a snooker player.
In my life, I've had estates in Russia, houses in Spain, in Norway, in the deep south of America.
I'm from a small town called Alesund in Norway.
I didn't get much peace, but I heard in Norway that Russia might well become a huge market for tractors soon.
I never saw myself as a women's footballer. Not when I was in my tiny village in Norway. Not when I was suffering in Germany. Not when I finally made it to Lyon.
I was born in the U.S., and that's who I rep. Although when the winter Olympics come around, I'm pretty partial to Norway's success and what they do.
We have to find compromises. That's the way it is in Norway.
I'll put it frankly - Britain has more influence in China than Norway or Switzerland, with all respect for the other countries. — © Jose Manuel Barroso
I'll put it frankly - Britain has more influence in China than Norway or Switzerland, with all respect for the other countries.
I am about to get involved with the biggest cancer hospital in Norway. They are building a fitness center to work with patients. I will be a consultant.
The financial passport is part of full access to the E.U. market, and a precondition for that is the contribution to the E.U. budget. That has been the case in Norway and in Switzerland. That is clear.
My former coach, Simen Agdestein, used to be the best player in Norway.
Right now I would rank Norway as the largest country in the world, I have never seen anything like it
I don't think you can mix classical music and reggae. It's not possible. But some producer in, like, Norway is going to put it together.
I've sung before, first in a band in high school and then in a band in Norway, but never in a musical.
November always seemed to me the Norway of the year.
It's not in the tradition: not even the schoolkids have hot lunches in Norway. They bring a couple of sandwiches from home.
I remember my second game for England - we lost 2-0 to Norway, I was subbed and didn't do myself justice and I thought that was the end of my England career.
I lived in Norway and Texas when I was a kid.
Norway, for some reason, I find Norway really fascinating, you really feel nature in that country. And then there is somewhere like Japan, which is the most interesting culturally because their whole psychology, how they think is so different to us and how I've grown up.
Apart from their goals, Norway haven't scored.
I am living in Norway, where I am under the care of the best cancer doctor in Norway and I can be closer to my family.
We probably got on better with the likes of Holland, Belgium, Norway and Sweden, some of whom are not even European.
That's the biggest struggle in Norway. Most of the money doesn't go to tennis.
I'm a bit biased, as I married a Norwegian, but Norway is an incredible country.
I think we should look to countries like Denmark, like Sweden and Norway, and learn from what they have accomplished for their working people.
They legislate fatherhood in Norway. It's not an option. That's a shocking thing to us in America.
I would not switch Bjorn Bergmann Sigurdarson for any other player in Norway.
Norway is a small environment. There are only three to four agents to deal with, just 15 other clubs, and that's it!
The myth about me as a footballer has grown: I am now the lost Maradona of Norway.
I grew up all over the world, including countries such as Sweden, Norway, U.S.A., and Kuwait.
I had to inspect all fighter units in Russia, Africa, Sicily, France, and Norway. I had to be everywhere.
There's a lot of crappy music that people like, you know, all over the world, and Norway is definitely not an exception.
Immigrants in Norway must learn Norwegian. The same should Spaniards in Spain do, if they want to work with Norwegians. — © Carl I. Hagen
Immigrants in Norway must learn Norwegian. The same should Spaniards in Spain do, if they want to work with Norwegians.
As foreign minister of Norway, I learnt how natural changes provoked by climate change are creating new sources of political instability.
What I love most about Norway is you ladies. Back home I'm used to fat and hairy women journalists.
Norway has a great history of women's football, but it's harder now. We've stopped talking about development, and other countries have overtaken us.
There's no-one up there in Northern Norway, food's terrible, but it's very, very beautiful to look at, if you've got eyes, and enjoy looking.
With its breezy guitars and sweet backing vocals, 'Norway' blows away any semblance of Beach House's previously bleak approach to pop.
Slowly, the oil and gas sector will decrease in Norway. The question in Norway is about how fast it will decrease.
I got an email from the Crown Prince of Norway asking me to talk at a summit for young Norwegian entrepreneurs. I ran to my wife and was like, 'Hey! I got an email from the Prince of Norway!'
Ellen Galinsky's surveys at the Families and Work Institute pointed to a desirable norm for many parents for working not full-time, but part-time. And I get that. I mean, Norway has a 35-hour work week. That counts as part-time for us in the United States, you know. And Norway's doing well, by the way.
Norway is combating climate change. It's an important issue for us. And we are committed to the Paris Agreement.
I think integration in Norway is, by all standards, going relatively well. People are working, taking education, learning the language. — © Jonas Gahr Store
I think integration in Norway is, by all standards, going relatively well. People are working, taking education, learning the language.
I think the U.K. would be perfectly successful as a standalone country, part of the European marketplace like Norway and Switzerland but without the expensive E.U. bureaucracy.
For years I wouldn't listen to black metal from anywhere but Norway.
I was born in Oslo, Norway, but now live in the suburbs of Southwest London, right near the River Thames. It's a lovely part of the world.
My dad, a geologist, was an expert in glaciers and permafrost, so we moved to a lot of cold places such as Canada, Iceland and Norway.
If you want to decrease housing costs in Norway, the most important thing is to build more.
The prison system in Norway is fairly civilized, by world standards, and so are the prisoners and the guards.
My parents would make the journey across the border to Norway to buy butter and flour, staples that were cheaper there than in Sweden.
The main experience, I think, is that we have managed: people moving to Norway has made Norway richer, economically, but also our culture has become more rich in many ways.
We have no mom-and-pop oil rigs in Norway.
Norway was occupied by the Germans in the Second World War, and I've met a lot of people who had to live through that occupation in varying degrees.
My mother-in-law's from Norway, and she's always liked old-school remedies.
I was born in Norway, and when I was little I went to live in Detroit, Michigan. My father was a professor of philosophy at Wayne University, and my mother was also a teacher.
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