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How Can I Find A Person From Norway I Have The Name And Have Tried Everything But Nothing Help

How to find a person in Norway?

I need to find a dear friend of mine that i met online and whom just disappeared without a trace (for a year now)
I know the exact name, city and a few names of friends/family even, but have no idea where to start.
Facebook has failed me in trying to find any form of contact with the above.
I don't know what to try, since it's overseas and I use english, i have no idea how to find somebody in Oslo, Norway.
Is there some social network for Oslo perhaps, or a forum for young people?

Why are there so few people in Norway?

Why are there so few people in Norway compared to anywhere else which is just as big? Someone at my school told me that it was because Norwegians were so shy and they were incapable of feeling love. They said that all Norwegians were loners and anti-social and asexual. Is it true that most Norwegian men have erectional dysfunctions already when they are 18? And they have more female hormones than any other men? This can explain the blonde hair, effeminate behavior and the very high voices. I think there might be some truth to it. Is there?
Effeminate men= less children
Arab men have more children than Norwegian men and Arab men are also more masculine. The deeper voices and darker hair proves more testosterone.
shyness/loner-ness/incapability of love= difficult to find a partner and to fall in love. This means less children.
Erectile dysfunction= difficulties to get it up.
Femininity= more gays and less children. More difficult to breed with less testosterone and bigger chances of having girls. Two girls can't breed?

If this is not true, why are there so few people in Norway?

What should I expect as a foreign student in Norway?

Don’t you worry! In my experience most Norwegians (especially citizens of Oslo) are very open and interested in all people. Foreigners or not.We DO have a way of socializing that could be interpreted as more “cold”, though. -And I think some foreigners, not used to Norwegian culture, may misinterpret this as Norwegians not being interested, or even not want you there. This simply isn’t so.Compared to other, “warmer” cultures, Norwegians lifeset is influenced by the Nordic cold climate and hundreds of years of being on the lookout for the nearest warm place to shelter you and your family. And let’s face it: If you didn’t have the opportunity to get “inside” you’d probably just die from the cold. Once you found this, you’d never leave your little den for other than hunting/gathering and you had to be suspicious of strangers (who’d probably wanted to take over your warm little spot).Norwegian daily life in 2017 is nothing like this, and hasn’t been for generations. But still, it is a part of the Norwegian spirit and it affects the way they act and how they may be perceived by others. But now it’s reduced to the outside. Don’t be affraid of talking to some guy/girl even if you get the impression they’re not interested. Maybe you just haven’t learned to interpret the subtle signs of Norwegian affection. And if you meet someone who really is not interested, they will tell you.Also, I think you can find a lot of good explanation of Norwegian behaviour in this book (not mine):The Social Guidebook to Norway 1 (An Illustrated Introduction)I promise: you will get close and life long friends while here in Oslo.Keep my name, and hit me up on Facebook if you should need any help with anything.

Are Swedes, Finns & Norwegians White?

Yes.

What do you mean by "truly white"?

Do you mean did they descend from other white races? Or do you mean that they developed the same way as other white races?

Anyways, when you use the term "white", I assume you're referring to appearance. In that case, they absolutely are white :P

Again, it goes back to what you consider white. Some people who are considered "black" in Canada or the US may be considered "white" in countries like South Africa that have a different tiered system for classifying race. Definitions of race change with time and within different cultures.

edit: If you're referring to if they really are "caucasian", the definition for that changes as well. The original concept of a caucasian race was created in the 1800s to refer to the general European population and people who were light-skinned in general. Under this definition Swedes, Finns and Norwegians are caucasian. However, under the current definition for "caucasian" resulting from genome studies, these people aren't caucasian.


edit: Okay again, just wondering: i'm guessing if most people hear white, they think you're talking about skin colour. If you're referring to someone being caucasoid then Swedes, Finns & Nor.'s aren't, at least not anymore. As far as I understand, I thought caucasoid referred to the people from a specific geographical region and that any descriptions of caucasoids were just a way of describing general features of the race, but not an exhaustive, definite list. N'est pas? So if someone is descended from within the Caucasus region then they are caucasoid, regardless of their features, right? Sorry if i'm sounding really weird, lol. I'm just learning about this on the fly.

I feel stupid talking english with an Norwegian accent?

You want to speak English without an accent, and then almost immediately afterward state that you want to speak like an American? Outrageous! They are the ones with an accent, RP is the correct way of speaking English! Arrrgghhh! *British rage*

Anyway, I highly doubt an accent will keep you from getting into Harvard or any other Ivy League university. I didn't apply for them myself, realizing my chances of getting in were extremely minor (they only let in some 15% of applicants or something like that), but I did go to quite prestigious NYCU for some time, before I moved to Norway. I got into NYCU even though I had a horrible Yorkshire accent and people had trouble understanding me despite speaking the same language. And I still, after three years in Norway, have to concentrate all the time to keep the English accent out of my Norwegian, which is very hard. But I'm only doing that because I'm such a perfectionist. Trust me, the Yanks have heard lots of accents that are much stronger than the average Norwegian accent. No worries. You had a couple of errors in your text, as well, but nothing major. I don't think your oral will be much worse.

But I'm interested in how you are going to pay for one of those ridiculously expensive American colleges or universities. You are aware that the Norwegian government only covers the cost of a few dozen universities in the States (and the only of them that is good is Berkeley), and only with up to 40.000 Norwegian kroner? Only from my few semesters at NYCU I racked up tens of thousands in loans.

PS: Oxford and Cambridge are way better than Harvard, contrary to what the burgerlovers claim.

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