Can American identify NORDIC languages? (Danish, Swedish, Norwegian) ㅣ GUESS THE NATIONALITY

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2024
  • How well do you know of Nordic languages?
    Today we had our American pannel Illa try to guess the Nordic languages just by listening to them
    Hope you enjoy
    Also make sure to follow our pannels
    🇺🇸 Illa - illairl?ig...
    🇩🇰 Sophia - / sophiagrane
    🇸🇪 Josefin - / josbf
    🇳🇴 Benni - / w._.benni
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @SimonEliasen123
    @SimonEliasen123 Před rokem +2556

    You should do a video where Danish, Norwegian and Swedish people can only speak their native tongue and has to collaborate on a challenge 😊

    • @mindimando
      @mindimando Před rokem +78

      Yes please make this happen!!

    • @Youtube_Stole_My_Handle_Too
      @Youtube_Stole_My_Handle_Too Před rokem +57

      That's a good idea. I believe five minutes of listening to the Scandinavians speak with each other would be enough to distinguish them for anyone with experience from the German language family, including English.
      The error with the way they did in this video is the lack of establishment of a baseline. A viewer can't relate to or understand the challenge without that baseline.

    • @doncarlodivargas5497
      @doncarlodivargas5497 Před rokem +96

      Scandinavians have little difficulties in understanding each other, Norwegians understands both Swedish and Danish and Danes usually understand Norwegian

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 Před rokem +1

      Brilliant idea

    • @o7d461
      @o7d461 Před rokem +49

      @@doncarlodivargas5497 not really. I know a lot of Norwegians can understand both but most definitely have a harder time with Danish. the only reason they can understand them and Swedes can't is because when written, Norwegian and Danish are almost the exact same whilst Swedish is a little bit different. However when speaking, Swedish and Norwegian are similar and Danish really different, they speak in a unique way that is closer to Dutch or German than Swedish or Norwegian.

  • @ns9176
    @ns9176 Před rokem +1593

    wish someone would have pointed out that there is no way you could mistake finnish for any of those other languages. Finnish is just something else

    • @momoyatzu
      @momoyatzu Před rokem +88

      she's american

    • @taminen6859
      @taminen6859 Před rokem +12

      moi

    • @excancerpoik
      @excancerpoik Před rokem +78

      yeah finnish isnt even indoeuropean and the language is built very differently we have a lot of suffixes instead of saying something before the word

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +42

      Finnish has more in common with Hungarian than the rest of the Nordic languages. :)

    • @excancerpoik
      @excancerpoik Před rokem +2

      @@kebman i know its common sense

  • @andremorning7427
    @andremorning7427 Před rokem +298

    "Guess the Nordic language Part 2" - But just bring 4-5 Norwegians from different parts of the country

  • @rigelr5345
    @rigelr5345 Před rokem +916

    Me and the Danish girl both thinking "weelll... I mean, sort of, but not entirely" and making the head angle at the same time when she said Denmark is next to the Netherlands 😂

    • @noneofyerbeeswax8194
      @noneofyerbeeswax8194 Před rokem +92

      Wait... You're telling me that Købendam is NOT the capital of Dutchmark?😲

    • @G1lgamesj
      @G1lgamesj Před rokem +23

      Ah come on, Denmark is basically the Netherlands right? Well, It's at least as flat xDD

    • @bananenmusli2769
      @bananenmusli2769 Před rokem +8

      Both at the North Sea so fair enough

    • @G1lgamesj
      @G1lgamesj Před rokem +5

      @@bananenmusli2769 We sometimes forget this but the Vikings sat on all our overoverover... grandmothers so we are basically the same people xD

    • @kraak71ify
      @kraak71ify Před rokem +13

      Didnt know we moved 😂

  • @thehoogard
    @thehoogard Před rokem +547

    You can distinguish quite easily between norwegian and swedish by the fact that norwegian typicall always rise in pitch at the end of sentences. To us swedes it give off a "always happy" texture to their speech.

    • @sugoish9461
      @sugoish9461 Před rokem +25

      Oh!! Yeye, Im swedish and I find that aspect of norwegian really nice!

    • @magnusgranskau7487
      @magnusgranskau7487 Před rokem +12

      @@sugoish9461 hahah i just tried speaking some sentences in norwegian and swedish and ive never noticed that i do that myself. im learning stuff

    • @iTheGeo
      @iTheGeo Před rokem +20

      Actually, Swedes do not have to refer to a Norwegian in order to get that "always happy" tone, they can just come into contact within their country with someone that comes from a place like Gothenburg (Göteborg) - Their tone is equally "happy" :)

    • @judebelli9098
      @judebelli9098 Před rokem +14

      I'm from Scotland, and heard of Norwegian as the "sing-song" language, with how it rises and falls in pitch. She sounded almost Scottish to me, so the Norwegian was the easiest to pick out!

    • @mspotato1354
      @mspotato1354 Před rokem +31

      Only the eastern side of Norway. West, parts of South and Northern Norway have a similar pitch to swedish that goes down instead of up ^^ But it's never represented in media haha
      But most of the dialects are still very sing song and up and down regardless

  • @herrprofessor
    @herrprofessor Před rokem +425

    Danish sounds more guttural, Swedish sound more nasal and Norwegian sounds more sing-songy.

    • @Floorman7285
      @Floorman7285 Před rokem +27

      Agreed!!! I also like the distinction of the “sjö” or “sju” sound in Swedish. Norwegian is a very happy up beat and cheerful!

    • @sebastiangade
      @sebastiangade Před rokem +17

      That's honestly spot on

    • @arcticblue248
      @arcticblue248 Před rokem +11

      Probably the best explanation I have seen for the difference between these languages. In writing however danish and norwegian is very similar, a few words maybe difference, we also use Æ. Ø and Å both in speaking and writing, while swedes use Å, Ä, Ö. and abit more different in writing than norwegian and danish. We also had for quite some time danish as official or governmental language so laws where written in dansih among other things.But Norway now have 3 official languages ... or 2 official spoken and 3 written, as Ny Norsk is only a written language and only considered a dialect spoken ... and then ofcourse Sami.

    • @fredriknumse8991
      @fredriknumse8991 Před rokem +30

      The noewegians love ski jumping so much, they made their language like ski jumping. Always having a little jump at the end of the sentence.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před rokem +30

      Totally depends on the speaker (and also dialect) though.
      They only thing constant is that Danish is guttural :)

  • @Arafaer
    @Arafaer Před rokem +135

    Funny part with Norwegian, Swedish and Danish is that as a Norwegian you can more easily read Danish and understand what it says, but it's much easier to understand the Swedish spoken language when you talk to them. Making it a bit special.
    The Norwegian language is based on the Danish seen Norway was under Danish rule for quite sometime in the past.
    But a lot of Norwegians have issues understanding the Danish language when spoken and especially when their dialect is thick. Then you sorta gotta get used to it before you fully understand what they say.

    • @Stefan-
      @Stefan- Před rokem +13

      Its the same for me as a Swede when it comes to hearing Danish VS Norwegian, with Norwegian i usually understand it pretty well but Danish can in some cases be almost impossible to understand even. I remember well when i went camping to Denmark in the early 90´s one time and i thought i would be able to understand the language somewhat ok at least but when we arrived at the camping site not far from Copenhagen i didnt understand a word they were saying and finally when they pointed at the electrical outlet i understood that they were asking if we needed any electricity, ha ha. Reading Danish and Norwegian is about the same though and i can understand most of it.

    • @secularnevrosis
      @secularnevrosis Před rokem +2

      @@Stefan- I think that the different dialects around Copenhagen are some of the most difficult to understand. Fyn and Jylland dialects are imho much easier to understand.

    • @Stefan-
      @Stefan- Před rokem

      @@secularnevrosis You are probably right, i have heard dialects of Danish that are way easier to understand even before i went there, probably mainly on TV though which is why i was so surpriced when i didnt understand a word.

    • @Magnus_Loov
      @Magnus_Loov Před rokem

      Danish numbers is a story of its own though. Halv-tres and things like that instead of 50,60,70,80,90 instead of the common Swedish and Norwegian counting system.
      No problem reading either Danish or Norwegian as a Swede though.
      I think Swedish is kind of the "middle ground" of the Nordic languages since we don't have so many totally unintelligible dialects as Norway and at the same time don't swallow every consonant as the Danish in the end making it probably the easiest to understand by a majority of Scandinavian people.

    • @Arafaer
      @Arafaer Před rokem +1

      @@Magnus_Loov Yea that's probly true, and Danish numbers are very special for sure. In addition to certain Norwegian Dialects are hard to understand at times. But doesn't Sweeden have natives that talk a language only those who leared it can understand ? Like "Samer" in Norway?

  • @JUMALATION1
    @JUMALATION1 Před rokem +197

    I was hoping for a Finnish person to introduce themselves. That would have been so different that she would have recognized it right away. Another wild card would have been a Swedish-speaking Finn (like me). We don't have the same "soft" pronounciation as the Sweden-Swedes, but we speak crystal clear Swedish as our mother tongue even though born here in Finland for many many many generations, sometimes even centuries.

    • @decryptedmemes7534
      @decryptedmemes7534 Před rokem +1

      e du från hangö elle?

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +7

      Kippis. I just said that cuz I like Finnish. I'm Norwegian tho. Skål!

    • @robertunderdunkterwilliger2290
      @robertunderdunkterwilliger2290 Před rokem +4

      Finlandssvenska är bästa svenskan. Det tycker många rikssvenskar.

    • @JUMALATION1
      @JUMALATION1 Před rokem +1

      @@decryptedmemes7534 Inte från Hangö, även om mina föräldrar har sommarstuga i Västra Nyland och min mammas släkt har rötter i trakterna. Jag är född i Helsingfors, men bor nu i Vanda.

    • @JUMALATION1
      @JUMALATION1 Před rokem +7

      @@robertunderdunkterwilliger2290 Trevligt att många rikssvenskar tycker det :D Jag pratade svenska som kund på McDonald's när jag bodde i Sverige och fick svar på engelska. Jag fortsatte prata svenska och de fortsatte på engelska. Väldigt konstig känsla efter att jag hört samma person prata flytande (riks)svenska med de tre föregående kunderna 😅

  • @egorsozonov7425
    @egorsozonov7425 Před rokem +160

    It's funny how she keeps mentioning Finnish even though that language is absolutely different to the three Germanic ones. Just from the word "Tack" you can already tell it's not Finnish. But she still thinks it must be alike just because the countries are close.

    • @jgagmgi
      @jgagmgi Před rokem +15

      Finno-ugric power

    • @jgagmgi
      @jgagmgi Před rokem +12

      I agree. Finnish is just in another level.

    • @lovem7105
      @lovem7105 Před rokem +11

      Finnish is completely incomprehensible to me as a swede, which is funny since Swedish is a language they teach at most schools in Finland

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +16

      Hello in Norwegian: Hallo.
      Hello in Danish: Hallo.
      Hello in Swedish: Hallå.
      Hello in Finnish: Moikka.

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +6

      @@lovem7105 Finnish is closer to Hungarian than Swedish.

  • @johnnorthtribe
    @johnnorthtribe Před rokem +281

    I do not get it why it is so hard for people outside of the Nordic Europe do understand the difference between Scandinavian languages (swedish, Norwegian, danish) and Nordic languages (swedish, norwegian, danish AND icelandic, faroese and finnish plus some smaller languages). Finnish (and sami) however belongs to a complete different language group from the rest.

    • @010arschloch
      @010arschloch Před rokem +16

      it is very easy actually to differentiate them by sound, no actually vocabulary knowledge needed, just by sound. But i guess many people out there simply never have actually getting in touch with them or lets say spent any time on them

    • @010arschloch
      @010arschloch Před rokem +6

      like it always cringes me when ppl have absolutely no single clue or guess the easy ones totally wrong, but i'm not gonna blame anyone out there. Probably would be the same when me confronting asian languages or something, where other people are way more enthusiast

    • @andyx6827
      @andyx6827 Před rokem +56

      I mean, she thinks Denmark is right next to the Netherlands, so don't expect her to know that Finnish belongs to a completely different language family :D

    • @010arschloch
      @010arschloch Před rokem +7

      @@andyx6827 well yeah thats another thing tho. Many dont know that finnish is in a different language family despite it being up there geographically with the other 3

    • @marco3391
      @marco3391 Před rokem +8

      @@andyx6827 its very close, she isn’t far off

  • @hjorleifuringason2778
    @hjorleifuringason2778 Před rokem +244

    For a native English speaker its important to remember that the Nordic languages with the exeption of Finnish are Germanic languages just like English, so the basic structure of these languages is quite similar

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +11

      There's a video of Eddie Izzard going to Friesland to buy a brown cow by using Old English. It's pretty hilarious if you're a language nerd...

    • @klauslunde
      @klauslunde Před rokem +1

      yeah one problem you cant get norwegian right because 5000 dialects the only "right" one is The oslo area but thtas cuz the most people speak that dialect

    • @benjasine3472
      @benjasine3472 Před rokem +4

      @@klauslunde danish and swedish both have a standard dialect, norwegian does not. So every dialect is Just as right as the fucking Oslo dialect

    • @secularnevrosis
      @secularnevrosis Před rokem +3

      @@benjasine3472 Swedes and Danes also have settled on *one* written language while Norwegians have two!!. That was the real suprise when I moved to Norway. There is even a language police! Incredible but true.
      In Sweden it doesn't matter what "dialect" you have when you are writing something. The word pojke (boy) is spelled as is, even if some dialects would say påg.

    • @klauslunde
      @klauslunde Před rokem +2

      @@benjasine3472 ofc but the oslo dialect the most people speak

  • @vegarhl
    @vegarhl Před rokem +110

    The Norwegian girl speaks Trondheim's dialect, a city in the middle of Norway. Norwegian and Swedish are very similar, not difficult to understanding most of the time. Norwegians and Swedes also understand moste of Danish with some challenges. German has some similarities with Norwegian (and the others) which means that we can sometimes partly understand but not speak

    • @coolenaam
      @coolenaam Před rokem +7

      Dutch has some similarities with Norwegian and the others as well, which makes sense because we all speak a Germanic language

    • @vegarhl
      @vegarhl Před rokem +2

      @@coolenaam Yes all are on the Germanic language tre ,but for my I feel German is closer (but not close) to Norwegian, compared to Dutch. Dutch and Austrian I can pick out certain "German" words but not much more than that :)

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel Před rokem +1

      @@coolenaam ha ha. Dutch is primitive English!

    • @coolenaam
      @coolenaam Před rokem +5

      @@TheMrPeteChannel ..... no, it's not

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +4

      @@TheMrPeteChannel English has more in common with Danish than Dutch. So Danish is primitive English. ;) Now go back to when Old Norse was spoken, and it's almost as similar to Old English as modern Swedish is to Norwegian!

  • @navn_ukjent
    @navn_ukjent Před rokem +155

    For Norway there is a large difference depending on where you are from. Some dialects sound closer to Swedish, while others are (a bit) closer to Danish. You do of course have dialects in the other Scandinavian countries, but with the possible exception of Scanian in Sweden, I don't think that they are as distinct. This is mostly due to the geography of Norway, where people were separated by lots of mountains and fjords.

    • @jandeusvult2920
      @jandeusvult2920 Před rokem +14

      Korrekt and there are even a few places that got influenced by germans, where I live. If you had birthday you would say E har gebursdag. A real meltingpot tbh

    • @Antero94
      @Antero94 Před rokem +3

      @@jandeusvult2920 My grandparents say gebursdag. I say Bursdag.

    • @Asa...S
      @Asa...S Před rokem +29

      There are a _lot_ of different dialects in Sweden that are _very_ distinct and different. Like the dialect in Värmland, they have "thick k", and is probably the closest to Norwegian. And, as you mentioned, the Scanian accents are closer to Danish. Swedish has a lot of sj-sounds, and they are pronounce differently in different regions. The dialect in Småland lacks the r (they sound like they have a speech impediment...). In Närke they have a bit of a whiny sound. On Gotland they have a lot of diftongs, like instead of hus (house) they say "heos" and instead of mer (more) they say "meir", and a lot of other thing that makes that accent very distinct. In Gothenburg they pronounce "i" as "e" in some words, instead of "fisk" (fish) they say "fesk".
      Just to name a few of the dialects of Swedish, there are so many!

    • @noral-l4086
      @noral-l4086 Před rokem +3

      Yes and in Östergötland we talk in a 'lazy' way where we don't pronounce som syllables. For example: Jag heter...(my name is) And Jag är från Amerika(i am from America) sounds more like Ja hete... And Ja e från Amerika.

    • @doncarlodivargas5497
      @doncarlodivargas5497 Před rokem +2

      In addition, in norway "language" or dialects are politicised

  • @henryqu19
    @henryqu19 Před rokem +136

    Probably one of the most asked videos of the channel , finally Nordic countries 👏

  • @maisiefreeman8597
    @maisiefreeman8597 Před rokem +85

    Danish: Listen for the uvular R, the stød, and the D becoming a ð sound.
    Swedish: Listen for the characteristic SJ sound, O becoming U, and the retroflex L/R sounds, tones mostly on 2 syllable words.
    Norwegian: Listen for the feminine gender inflection and tones on all words, regardless of number of syllables or gender.

    • @zephyriic
      @zephyriic Před rokem +11

      pretty sure the O doesnt become U in swedish
      "stol" isnt pronounced "stul", its closer (not really, but CLOSER) to "stool"
      the O is heavier

    • @treebug7738
      @treebug7738 Před rokem +2

      @@zephyriic exactly idk what made them think that O become U lol

    • @Leo-uu8du
      @Leo-uu8du Před rokem +2

      @@treebug7738 In Norwegian this is sometimes the case as well as u becoming something like the German ü

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +2

      It's hard to pin Norwegian down, because there are at least four main dialects spoken (North, West, Mid and East), that also sound very different, with different ways of pronouncing the R sound, and _seven_ different ways of saying I. Eight if you count Swedish. Add to this that Norwegian has two different standard writing systems, Nynorsk and Bokmål, with Bokmål being the most prevalent.

    • @TheFakePlayerGame
      @TheFakePlayerGame Před rokem +2

      for norwegian my method is to listen closely if it sounds weird. otherwise its swedish cuz im native-

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Před rokem +53

    Me and my Swedish friend enter a bar in Spain where the bartender was a Danish girl. They start a conversation, him speaking Swedish and her, Danish. Everything was intelligible for the both of them. 😄

    • @hencytjoe
      @hencytjoe Před rokem +12

      She probably spoke Swedified Danish then to avoid confusion, it's a common occurance. Danish is so hard to understand

    • @tovep9573
      @tovep9573 Před rokem +17

      @@hencytjoe It takes a week or two in Denmark for the normal Swede to get the hang of Danish and after that it's easy. One just have to find the pattern in how they swallow half their words and weaken the consonants on whats left.
      Swedish, Norwegian and Danish share over 90% of their vocabulary. I think with Icelandic it's about 70%.

    • @Exerosp
      @Exerosp Před rokem +2

      @@tovep9573 Nah man, we need the danish person to talk english or very slowly. It's a very muddy language for someone who's not used to it so even after speaking a year with some danish mates I still ask them to repeat a few words in english because I can't even guess how to it's spelled. Same thing with some scanians lmao

    • @erikeriksson1660
      @erikeriksson1660 Před rokem +5

      @@Exerosp If a swede and a dane both speak articulate they can easily understand each other. The grammar between the two langages are almost identical and they share more than 90 % of the words. Swedish and danish are very differently pronounced. That means that swedes and danes can have problems understanding each other the same way that someone from northern England and someone from southern England can have problems understanding each other.

    • @Exerosp
      @Exerosp Před rokem +2

      @@erikeriksson1660 It's not a matter of the grammar being similar. How Danes pronounce their words make them really hard of hearing to a swede. And it's not like comparing dialects, that's comparing Northerners dialect with Scanian in Sweden. I'm swedish, most of the people across the country that I know are swedish, and most will agree that yes, danish is hard to hear.

  • @jameelahedwards8550
    @jameelahedwards8550 Před rokem +38

    Looking forward to another edition, hopefully featuring Finnish and Icelandic

  • @haraldkjrgensen2255
    @haraldkjrgensen2255 Před rokem +101

    The fact that she didn't correct her on the Netherlands being close to the Scandinavia is so Scandinavian

    • @Nekotaku_TV
      @Nekotaku_TV Před rokem +13

      Dutch and Danish are quite close.

    • @carstenschultz5
      @carstenschultz5 Před rokem +1

      Just count the regions where they traditionally speak Low German as Dutch :)

    • @haraldkjrgensen2255
      @haraldkjrgensen2255 Před rokem +7

      @@Nekotaku_TV Yeah but not as close as Danish, Norwegian and Swedish

    • @Bragosso
      @Bragosso Před rokem +3

      Denmark and the Netherlands are just 200 kilometers from each other, which you could count as extreme geographical proximity.

    • @jonadabtheunsightly
      @jonadabtheunsightly Před rokem +1

      I mean, they're, what, a hundred miles apart? Something like that? So it's like a European saying Detroit is close to Toronto. (And yes, she was talking about geographic proximity, and reasoning based on that, about the languages. Which would not be valid in general, but in this case the languages in question are in fact related.)

  • @johnhynes8721
    @johnhynes8721 Před rokem +67

    Danish sounds dramatically different from Swedish/Norwegian, I knew immediately the first woman was Danish.
    I struggled with #2, and kept going back and forth between Swedish/Norwegian. The women's name being Josefin was why I guessed Swedish, since I have seen Josefin/Josephine as a name in Swedish films/TV or actresses from Sweden.
    #3. Process of elimination that it would be Norwegian. Unsure if I would have guessed Norwegian is she had gone second.
    As for Finnish. It would have been interesting to have a person from Finland. Finnish is not a Scandinavian language, though it would have been the one language to ask "what is thank you" amongst the Nordic countries.

    • @lissandrafreljord7913
      @lissandrafreljord7913 Před rokem +12

      Danish sounds so glottal. It's like they are speaking with a hot potato or cotton swabs in their mouth. At times, it sounds like they are choking on you know what, after giving deep throat.

    • @rigelr5345
      @rigelr5345 Před rokem +7

      Hi my name is Josefine and I'm from Denmark lol

    • @noneofyerbeeswax8194
      @noneofyerbeeswax8194 Před rokem +2

      Re: #2, her 'I' and 'Y' are a dead giveaway that she's Swedish. Nobody else makes those atrocious sounds. Also, the Swedish 'sj' is different from any other language. But this only applies to the standard language and "normalized" regional accents, of course. There are many dialects that can have very different pronunciation. If she were speaking some western dialect, there would be no way for anyone but a native speaker to tell it apart from Norwegian.

    • @avajensen4324
      @avajensen4324 Před rokem +1

      @@lissandrafreljord7913Swedish and Norwegian sounds like someone has the hiccups

    • @niko1ndex
      @niko1ndex Před rokem

      @@lissandrafreljord7913 Is it just Swedes life purpose to do the same copy and paste for every video containing a Dane 😂

  • @hin_hale
    @hin_hale Před rokem +34

    The swedish girl only talked half as much as the other two. Which was genuinly quite swedish of her. 😆

  • @PotatoKing147
    @PotatoKing147 Před rokem +21

    Really fascinating as a Norwegian how fast I could recognize each language instantly. We all just have a lot of small (or big things) that distinguishes us between each other huh :D

    • @LasVegar
      @LasVegar Před rokem +3

      Also she was an trønder, she said «æ e» i am

    • @PotatoKing147
      @PotatoKing147 Před rokem +1

      @@LasVegar -Jepp eg sku- Yep I was gonna comment on it as well, but didn't want things to get too long/confusing haha. Was honestly surprised they invited someone from Trondheim and not Oslo, considering that's not where most of the speakers from Norway they invite are from, at least from the videos I have watched. Love the trønder dialect tho, so I don't mind at all :D

    • @zirak93-2
      @zirak93-2 Před rokem

      @@PotatoKing147 It could be and probably is because she studies in Oslo. She said she lives near the Ocean. From what I know there is no big ocean around Trondheim, but in Oslo we have a big fjord.

  • @lzbscalle7943
    @lzbscalle7943 Před rokem +4

    Funnily enough, Danish and Swedish, both East Scandinavian languages, were the same once, whereas Norwegian was very different, speaking a West Scandinavian language, more in line to how they speak in Iceland. Long before that, however, all Norsemen spoke more or less the same language. Swedish is the most similar to that of old Danish, as it originated in Denmark. While some say Swedish has influenced the Norwegian language, this is quite misleading, as it only was occupied by Sweden for less than 100 years, where Norway was given great autonomy, leading its way to its own independence, before which it was occupied by Denmark for hundreds of years. In fact, Norwegian is very similar to the Danish spoken before it gained its guttural noises, from Frankish and Low German influences. These guttural noises were later introduced, but after achieving independence it practically disappeared.
    Enjoyed the video, would be cool to include Faroese, Icelandic, Gutnish and even some East Swedish dialects (Finnish Swedish or Estonian Swedish for instance, found in Gammalsvenskby in Ukraine) some time in the future. Maybe include someone who speaks Norn (New Norn), as it is seeing some revival on the Shetland and Orkney islands. Some also list Elfdalian as its own language.

  • @Ironcurtainproductions
    @Ironcurtainproductions Před rokem +21

    I, as a Swedish-American fluent in Swedish, was dying inside when she guessed Norwegian. But I see how you can make the mistake, they’re very similar to non-native speakers. But that she instantly got rid of Sweden in the process of elimination…

  • @EDuGoIHuvvet
    @EDuGoIHuvvet Před rokem +14

    Thing about Sweden is that it's so full of very different dialects.
    So depending on where in the country you're from, you can sound incredibly different.
    Even to the point of the most northern part not understanding the most southern, and vice versa.
    The most northern part is more similar to Norwegian , and the most southern is more similar to Danish.
    I think that's part of why it can be very hard to learn Swedish, but if you know Swedish, the other two languages becomes a bit easier to learn as well.
    So I'm not surprised at all that she didn't clock the Swedish girl x)
    But then there's also Åland, which belongs to Finland but where they speak both Finnish and Swedish. And that's also the case with some other parts of Finland too.
    There's even a dialect called Finland Swedish.

    • @SunRoadG07
      @SunRoadG07 Před rokem +3

      SAME WITH NORWAY, the dialects are so different even native Norwegian speakers have hard times understanding each other depending where in norway they are from!

    • @EDuGoIHuvvet
      @EDuGoIHuvvet Před rokem +3

      @@SunRoadG07 I can imagine!
      Sweden is over all a lot wider, but Norway is a little bit longer, so that must be why!
      Isn't it kinda interesting though?
      I love that there's so many dialects. And so many mixes too.
      Like, I live in a region in the south thats called Småland. But I live just like 20km from the region called Skåne. So while I speak småländska, there are still some words or phrases from the skånska. And older generations have even more of that mix, which makes it even harder for people up north to understand, and vice versa.
      So I think it's cool, but it's also too bad that it makes it harder for non natives to learn.
      People down here usually have it fairly easy to understand at least basic Danish. But I'm completely lost at it 😅 I have to speak English when I'm over there, or when talking to tourists here, because I can barely understand a word! My friends thinks that's very amusing 🙈
      Norwegian is easier, but I struggle a bit there too. At least when it goes quickly.
      Do you find it difficult to understand either Swedish or Danish?

    • @SunRoadG07
      @SunRoadG07 Před rokem +1

      @@EDuGoIHuvvet I know right! Also, very true that the older generations have thicker dialect than the younger ones.
      To be honest I understand Swedish alot better than Danish. That might be because Swedish is more similar Norwegian or the fact that I grew up with a little Swedish TV like Pippi Langstrømpe and Emil i Lønneberget😄

    • @EDuGoIHuvvet
      @EDuGoIHuvvet Před rokem +1

      @@SunRoadG07 I kinda think that's a shame sometimes. Like, it would be sad if the dialects just disappeared one day.
      I have a thicker dialect when speaking to my dad, but otherwise it's kinda mild.
      Yeah that's probably it for me too 😊
      I've only been in Norway one time, basically just over the border. But there weren't any problem understanding the cashier when we were shopping. Like, it's pretty easy to understand your numbers when they're spoken.
      In Danmark that always gives me a bit of anxiety, because I can't for the life of me understand their number system 🙈
      Oh so they weren't dubbed to Norwegian? That's nice! 😄
      I don't think we had any shows from Norway. Not that I can remember at least.
      We had some Finnish tv though. Some in pure Finnish, and some in Finnish Swedish.
      But there are a lot of people from Finland or that have family there, so that's probably why that is.
      Don't understand it though 😅
      I can count to 10 and say thank you, but that's pretty much it.

    • @tormodhag6824
      @tormodhag6824 Před rokem +2

      Norwegian is actually even more different with dialects because it's more geographically challenging to travel in Norway so people crossed cities less in the past and dialects came to be in isolation

  • @loveglobalmusic
    @loveglobalmusic Před rokem +16

    How nice that you made a video about the Nordic languages 😊 it was way fun to watch their interactions cause I could relate to myself as a Swedish and it put a smile on my face

  • @Somm_RJ
    @Somm_RJ Před rokem +14

    Why did they have to be guessed one by one? They can be presented one by one but they should be guessed which is which at the same time at the end. This format in the video makes it easier to guess the last participant.

    • @thespankmyfrank
      @thespankmyfrank Před rokem +1

      Yes, also, I think that would help Illa since she'd be able to compare them to eachother. She said she'd heard Swedish before and maybe she'd be able to distinguish it when heard next to Norwegian, but not on its own.

  • @nathanspeed9683
    @nathanspeed9683 Před rokem +2

    Illa is back! It was a fun and educational video!

  • @Sofie72
    @Sofie72 Před rokem +10

    The ÆØÅ letters are used both in Denmark and Norway our languages are very similar in writing but they sound different. Sweden has their own variation of these letters. Å, Ä, Ö We usually understand each-other very well, but most struggle a little bit when it comes to some of the most complex dialects, both each others and our own. I would say all 3 countries have many living dialects, and interesting tongue twisters to offer up to a eagerly listening ear :) Talking of interesting Finnish and Icelandic are very different and often mindboggling to the most of us in Scandinavia. But we love them anyway :)

    • @SkyripperThaBird
      @SkyripperThaBird Před rokem

      I think Icelandic can be understood to a degree by most Scandinavian speakers, at least the most common words and sentences. However I do agree, when I first heard spoken Icelandic I wasn't even certain what I was listening to at first. I think Icelandic is a beautiful language, and I've been striving to learn more of it - no thanks to my obsession with the viking age.

    • @Hi-lz7wo
      @Hi-lz7wo Před 9 měsíci

      I think of Ä and Ö as the swedish equivelant to Æ and Ø.
      Ja, jeg er norsk, hvis du lurte på om det. (Yes, I am norwegian if you're wondering about that.)

    • @zaynes5094
      @zaynes5094 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @Sofie72 That just sounds like every other major country in the world. You go to Japan and they'll have different dialects in different regions. Hokkaido they speak a different dialect, in Osaka, they speak a slightly different dialect that can be funny but also confusing as someone who's more used to the regular Tokyo-ben dialect. In the Kansai region of Japan, so around Kyoto, they speak Kansai-ben dialect which is very different from what they speak and how they speak way up in Hokkaido.

  • @CinCee-
    @CinCee- Před rokem +51

    Denmark is not next to The Netherlands theres a little tiny country called Germany in between

    • @CinCee-
      @CinCee- Před rokem +2

      @@RaniHinnawi tru dat

    • @davidoverbye3410
      @davidoverbye3410 Před rokem +5

      Now you are getting into the politics of Frisia and Slesvig-Holsten. How about we just say Denmark is “close” to the Netherlands. And they do share a maritime border.

    • @broendbykim
      @broendbykim Před rokem +2

      You need to work on your "proportions" or tell me how you would squeeze in Germany between Denmark and The Netherlands.

    • @jaysimoes3705
      @jaysimoes3705 Před rokem +2

      It is a small part of Germany that is in between, it takes a few hours to cross it. Liguistically Dutch and Danish are close, which is what this is all about. Of course the three over here are a lot closer but Dutch is still very close. When I went to Sweden (south Central part) we had a chat with friends (Swedish) and I mentioned I was able to read Danish but not understand it and they said they had the exact same experience.

  • @matijapongracic4812
    @matijapongracic4812 Před rokem +11

    Danish is recognizable by the soft D and Swedish by the sound SJ (like in SJU) and in some swedish dialects by viby-I which only exists in Swedish. If it's not any of those and you hear tones, then it's Norwegian (Swedish also has tones but not as obvious as Norwegian)

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +1

      Norwegian has at least four main dialects that are pretty different from one another. But most of them are more singy-songy than Swedish, although Swedish can also be pretty singy-songy I guess :p The most monotonous dialect in Norway is the Northern one. Same for Danish, it's kind of monotonous, but also very different with the glottal stops.

  • @eliseivanica
    @eliseivanica Před rokem +12

    i’m an australian learning swedish so this was pretty easy for me lmaooo.
    the danish was obvious immediately because the sound is insanely different from swedish & norwegian, i’ve heard people say it sounds like they have a potato in their mouth lmfao, i have to agree, it’s much harder to understand.
    surprisingly the swedish one was actually a little harder, i think it sounds a little different to the swedish i hear alot but i got it because the up and down sounds gave it away.
    the norwegian was very easy to get as it was the last language (as finnish isn’t a germanic language) it’s so similar to swedish but they speak a little different, there’s less up and down, it’s more similar to english in the sound???

    • @moondaughter1004
      @moondaughter1004 Před rokem +1

      The swedish speaker has a dialect so that's probably why it was harder to recognize. There are some dialects that are incomprehensible even to swedes.
      Also you can usually tell if someone is Norwegian if they sound like they're ski-jumping on the end of every sentence

    • @Frogcape
      @Frogcape Před rokem

      också lär mig svenska

    • @AskForDoodles
      @AskForDoodles Před rokem +2

      I find Norwegian easiest to understand, because the vocabulary is most similar to Danish, but they actually bother to properly enunciate all the syllables.

    • @aspannas
      @aspannas Před rokem

      @@moondaughter1004 No she doesn't have a specific dialect, she speaks rikssvenska

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre Před rokem

      Norwegian generally is perceived as more "up and down" but dialects and social setting (or personality) may apply :)

  • @RaatoHamse
    @RaatoHamse Před rokem +5

    You should try to have Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian and Japanese (there's so many similar words)

  • @aspir133
    @aspir133 Před rokem +5

    Haha! I never talked yet to a person from Scandinavia irl, but easily guessed all the languages :-) Such a fun video, thank u, guys!

  • @rickcharon1197
    @rickcharon1197 Před rokem +2

    I really like the sounds coming from these languages , there should be more videos about northern countries

  • @StalKalle
    @StalKalle Před rokem +5

    You would have noticed Finnish because it belongs to the Uralic languages family tree and is completely unrelated to the other Scandinavian languages (Indo-European family tree)... and most others. Despite trying they have so far not been able to find anything connecting it to the other language family trees. It's a very debated topic where many have tried to find a connection by have failed.

  • @julian.16
    @julian.16 Před rokem +43

    They're Scandinavian laguages, no nordic.
    And for Illa: Finnish doesn't have anything to do with Danish, Norwegian and Swedish

    • @jasperkok8745
      @jasperkok8745 Před rokem +5

      There are at least 2 definitions of Scandinavia, one of which includes Denmark and the other one doesn’t. I think Nordic is quite an accurate word to use, although this includes Finnish, which is completely unrelated to any of the other languages spoken in the region. Finnish is related to Estonian, and (distantly) to Hungarian.

    • @luminoustarisma
      @luminoustarisma Před rokem +15

      It's okay to say Nordic as well as scandinavian, no one up here would care as long as you don't bring in the term Scandinavia with Finland or Iceland.

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 Před rokem +15

      They are both Scandinavian and Nordic.

    • @jasperkok8745
      @jasperkok8745 Před rokem +8

      @@reineh3477 And by calling it Nordic, they make it more difficult to the uninformed, because they may think Finnish is in the mix while it is not here (and Finnish is actually completely different and totally incomprehensible to the average speaker of the Germanic languages - unless they have learnt Finnish, that is).

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 Před rokem +7

      @@jasperkok8745 yes I know, they are Finno-ugric.

  • @ff_crafter
    @ff_crafter Před rokem +39

    As a Linguistics major it's hurts to watch their explanation

    • @bowser1166
      @bowser1166 Před rokem +4

      "As a Linguistics major it‘s hurts" 🤪

  • @ClaireBear_9612
    @ClaireBear_9612 Před rokem +4

    This video actually helped me a little bit because I’m 20% Norwegian and I’m in the middle of learning Norwegian so I kinda helped me understand Norwegian better.

  • @Captain-Axeman
    @Captain-Axeman Před rokem +8

    It's fun watching as a Norwegian, since it's somewhat easy too understand what they are saying and what the language is.
    Wish you threw in Icelandic or Farose. I learned Farose from my friend (whom was a neighbor) and begun learning Icelandic.

    • @zaynes5094
      @zaynes5094 Před 3 měsíci

      @Captain-Axeman Ah interesting, but I hear that Icelandic is actually different from the other modern Germanic Languages because it is more based on Old Norse language than modern Northern Germanic.
      Most North Europeans could probably understand each other well enough. Depending on where they're from. If they're from some obscure Norwegian town then maybe they'd not really understand.

  • @hunchbackaudio
    @hunchbackaudio Před rokem +27

    I'm Dutch and I've been to all of these countries multiple times and I have a hard time telling which is which, just by hearing. But Norway is the only place where I can hear what they are talking about a bit, if the speaker speaks clearly and I concentrate hard enough. Reading goes pretty well, a lot of words are similar, it's just a matter recognising them. But it's tricky, some words are the same but have a totally different meaning. Ikke in Norwegian is not, but in Dutch it means me or myself. Snakke is Norwegian for talk, but in Dutch it means, gasping, or really wanting something.

    • @thespankmyfrank
      @thespankmyfrank Před rokem +7

      That's actually interesting! As a Swede, I can usually read Dutch, but hearing it I understand just about nothing because the pronounciations are so different.

    • @torba23
      @torba23 Před rokem +7

      as a Norwegian who have travelled a lot to the Netherlands I must say I do agree with the similarities, I tend to find that reading Dutch is not very problematic as it almost seams like a mix between English, Norwegian and German. Might be that there is a lot of similarities because there have been a lot of trade between Norway and the Netherlands in the 1600-1900. also a lot of Norwegians immigrated to the Netherlands around that time as well.

    • @hunchbackaudio
      @hunchbackaudio Před rokem +5

      @@torba23 Wel they're all Germanic languages and from what I learned on YT, Dutch didn't undergo major sound shifts from the old Germanic, like German or English. So there should be recognisable words for everyone. Having family migrated to Norway in the seventies I know we're so culturally alike, we probably won't have much trouble fitting in, both ways.

    • @hunchbackaudio
      @hunchbackaudio Před rokem +2

      @@thespankmyfrank It's all about recognising the words. It reminds me of the Dutch singer Cornelis Vreeswijk who used to sing his songs in Dutch and Swedish and it's great fun to hear the same song in both languages, besides the fact he's got some great songs.

    • @noneofyerbeeswax8194
      @noneofyerbeeswax8194 Před rokem

      @@hunchbackaudio I've learned Swedish as a second language, and written Dutch is quite intelligible to me. But I can also read German, which definitely helps. The spoken language is a different story though...
      Hmm... I know another Dutch singer, currently living in Sweden. Extremely talented lady and an absolute legend in some circles. I wonder if you know who I'm talking about.

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Před rokem +10

    My stepdad's heritage on his mom's side was Swedish. He remembers his mother teaching him, "Tack sa mycket." This is why I knew right away the second girl was Swedish. 😄

    • @Philip-nh8wk
      @Philip-nh8wk Před rokem +3

      Så* ;)
      Varsågod = your welcome :)

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem

      It's more common to say "Tack så mycket" (thanks so much) in Sweden, but sometimes they also say Tack ska du ha, which is the same as Takk skal du ha(ve) in Norwegian and Danish. You can say it sarcastically in all languages. Meanwhile if you're actually thankful, you say "Tack so mycket" in Sweden, and "Tusen takk" (thanks a thousand) in Norwegian.

  • @Menape
    @Menape Před rokem +24

    They should also have a fin talking swedish there maybe from swedish finnish border or finland, gotta love finnish swedish accent

    • @debrickashaw9387
      @debrickashaw9387 Před rokem +7

      Muumin finnish-swedish :D

    • @Cronin_
      @Cronin_ Před rokem +3

      Finland-Swedish, yeah. Sure we are Finns, but many of us are ethnically Swedish and if you want to be really specific you can (and should) call us Finland-Swedes.

    • @Menape
      @Menape Před rokem +2

      Ok, finland-swedes and tornedalingar then. :)

    • @zoom5024
      @zoom5024 Před rokem

      @@Cronin_ That's what you are called in Sweden. FinlandsSvenskar.

    • @Cronin_
      @Cronin_ Před rokem +4

      @@zoom5024 Int bara i Sverige. Nog kallar vi oss själva fö Finlandssvenskar också😅

  • @n0namesowhatblerp362
    @n0namesowhatblerp362 Před rokem +4

    The swedish language is spoken in the middle of the mouth, the danish in the throat and the norwegian in front of the teeth. Source: kim A. page scandinavian voices (on youtube)
    From quora
    It probably is Swedish and I can tell you about a personal experience. I once talked in West-Flemish to a Swede. (West Flemish is a dialect derived from Dutch and is spoken in a Belgian province as well as in the adjacent part of the Netherlands). The Swede answered … in Swedish. We both understood each other for, say, 30%. I tried the same in Norway but it did not work at all.
    My personal experience as a swede, if i overhear dutch people speaking abroad, i first think theyre swedish. Until i hear the "Ik". That doesnt even happen to me with danish or norwegian.

  • @ForgottenGames
    @ForgottenGames Před rokem +23

    As someone from the Netherlands, I could understand about 50% of the words as somewhat connected to my language

    • @yourdream8727
      @yourdream8727 Před rokem +3

      Kind of the same with German

    • @simens8646
      @simens8646 Před rokem +4

      Dutch has some fascinating similarities with Scandinavian languages. Both in terms of words and in terms of pronunciation.
      Dutch people coming to Norway often become very fluent and speak almost flawless Norwegian, partly because our languages share some tricky consonant combination sounds that many other languages don't have.
      Also there are some words that have common roots in Dutch and Norwegian, but are somewhat different in English or German:
      For example:
      English: Hospital
      German: Krankenhaus
      Norwegian: Sykehus
      Swedish: Sjukhus
      Danish: Hospital (Sygehus)
      Dutch: Ziekenhuis

    • @Magnus_Loov
      @Magnus_Loov Před rokem +4

      @@simens8646 In Swedish we also have a variety of different "Sch"-sounds, including some very thick guttural "Sch"-sounds often with very different spellings, which also may be something similar to Dutch? Something I don't see in Danish or Norwegian.
      To me listening to Dutch, it is often a case of very muddy speaking with bursts of passages of phrases that suddenly sounds like clear Swedish without even an accent then its back to the Dutch muddynes again. Almost like listening to a drunk Swede!
      Written Dutch is clearly easier (just as it is with Danish)

    • @debbyao
      @debbyao Před rokem +2

      Hehe ja! I feel the same when I hear Dutch! We kind of understand eacother. Im from Norway.

    • @missinternationalnorway2022
      @missinternationalnorway2022 Před rokem +2

      I speak both Norwegian and Dutch fluently, but I don’t feel like they are very similar 😊

  • @angaudlinn
    @angaudlinn Před rokem +17

    It would've been very cool if they indeed had a finnish girl to throw in the mix. That would throw her off guard! :)

    • @jgagmgi
      @jgagmgi Před rokem +3

      Lol. Everyone else "Tack"
      Finnish girl "Kiitos"

  • @hueypautonoman
    @hueypautonoman Před rokem +23

    Bjork taught me to read Danish scientific books to learn the truth and not let poets lie to me.

    • @miomip
      @miomip Před rokem

      Are you Swedish or Norwegian? I can't put my finger on where of Bjork

    • @Henrik46
      @Henrik46 Před rokem +3

      @@miomip Well, Björk is Icelandic, but OP might be of any nationality, and just inspired by that epic ASMR video with her.

    • @miomip
      @miomip Před rokem

      @@Henrik46 Thanks I just couldn't think oo where the name where from.

    • @zaynes5094
      @zaynes5094 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Henrik46Why does she look Asian? Are some Icelanders traced back to Asia? I guess most people could trace back to the Middle East right? Either the Middle East or Asia.

  • @malenaboy
    @malenaboy Před rokem +7

    Funny enough, I have lived in Sweden as an exchange student, just got back from Christmas vacation there, 4 years since the last time. I still remember a little bit of Swedish, my cousin, who now lives there is way better at the language than me now, and never been to Norway or Denmark But I’m able to speak a little bit of each, and only been to Åland in Finland. Only know Kiitos

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem

      I wonder how a Finnish Norwegian Bergen dialect would sound like ....... Hmmmmmm!!!11111

  • @lm_village
    @lm_village Před rokem +35

    As a Swedish person, this was painful to watch, but also adorable.

  • @Real_MisterSir
    @Real_MisterSir Před rokem +4

    In general you could say Norwegian has more words directly in common with Danish, but the pronunciation/"singy" way of speaking is more closely related to Swedish.
    It may be easier for a Swedish person to verbally understand a Norwegian, while it may be easier for a Dane to understand Norwegian in writing.
    Then on top, regional dialect differences within each country can be different enough that people from the same country may not always understand each other perfectly, especially in the outer rural areas. If I travel 3 hours southwest in Denmark I might have trouble understanding a naturally flowing conversation in my own native language xD

  • @Mojova1
    @Mojova1 Před rokem

    Thank you for taking us with you guys. Greetings from Finland...Would have been an easier game.

  • @chicky96
    @chicky96 Před 9 měsíci +2

    i’ve always had more trouble distinguishing spoken danish and norwegian, other than sometimes danish sounds more swallowed but to me, swedish is the easiest of the three with that sj, almost like an H sound seen in sju (seven) that the other two don’t have. it’s also incredibly surprising to me still how many people think finnish sounds anything like the scandinavian languages. it sounds more like russian or estonian, naturally since it’s uralic, not germanic.

    • @zaynes5094
      @zaynes5094 Před 3 měsíci

      @chicky96 How the f did that happen?

  • @hege4318
    @hege4318 Před rokem +7

    We in Norway also have rødgrøt (red porridge mentioned by the Danish woman). I grew up with it at my grandparents house and in cooking at school. 😊
    It's funny because the Norwegian girl is from the east part of Norway while I'm from the west part, so we talk at least as different as Norwegian and Swedish I think. Someone in Oslo don't understand what I say, and they sometimes have subtitles on tv when it's people from the west speaking 😅
    She says jeg heter.. and I say eg hette, sounding different and we have a different r sound, not the rolling r 😛 And just 10 minutes with car we get to the farms where they say æg hætte with more of a Danish kind of sound but not really 😂😅 We also have 2 different ways of writing (Nynorsk and Bokmål), eg. Love kan be both elsker and kjærlighet in Norway (meining 2 different things), but kjærlighet is bokmål and Kjærleik is nynorsk 😛 They even spell Norway different 😅 Norge and Noreg 🙈😂

    • @opethium647
      @opethium647 Před rokem +2

      Ho sa da også "æ" heter og "e" for er. Ser ut til å vær en liten blanding, rart.

    • @BlueSpiritArt
      @BlueSpiritArt Před rokem +1

      I'm also from the west side, and one of my friends from Oslo doesn't understand much of what I say either, especially when I use words like "ani" and "dotte" 😂

    • @SebHaarfagre
      @SebHaarfagre Před rokem

      I'm from Oslo but any Oslonians being so -dumb- non-worldly (so to say) is quite a bit of shameful for me 😅 And I feel less in common with them than random people from anywhere else.
      It doesn't take much exposure to "get" our dialects and quickly learn to understand, even though they're so different. Get out of your home, go someplace else than your local street you know? Meet more people than your mom and dad 😅😅
      One of my favourite words are "Kjærleik på staur" and if I remember correctly this case was from Stord lol.
      Also learnt something like "Fonne noke brakji" and "Fidla på fudla" but completely forgot the specific contextes haha.
      Sogn and inner Telemark is my favourite dialects I think.
      Also people who think Oslo doesn't have a dialect haven't met me or a couple 100 of my friends 😂😂
      Only students from _other_ parts of the country, speak this weird "synthetic" "Østlands" dialect.
      Og pappagutter og sosser fra vestkanten seff haha

  • @thomasjonsson2766
    @thomasjonsson2766 Před rokem +3

    Some norwegian (e.g. from Bergen) dialects and Swedish ones (e.g. Skånska/scanian) dialects sounds very different from the rest (they even sounds simiöliar to one and other). Finnish is from a different language group compare to the others.

  • @JeppeBeier
    @JeppeBeier Před rokem +7

    I wouldn't really call Denmark a neighbor to The Netherlands. Our borders aren't connected and there's a pretty long trip through Germany to get to The Netherlands.

    • @AskForDoodles
      @AskForDoodles Před rokem

      Not geographically, but our languages are similar due to a greater influence during the Dutch renaissance (or so I'm told). When I hear Dutch being spoken I sometimes have to check if I'm having a stroke, because it sounds like Danish, but it's also clearly not. Uncanny Valley effect, I guess :)

    • @thorguldhammer7642
      @thorguldhammer7642 Před rokem

      Alle danskere rystede på hovedet da hun sagde det. No 🧢

    • @JeppeBeier
      @JeppeBeier Před rokem +1

      @@AskForDoodles Personally as a Dane I'd say Dutch sounds more like German with some weird words added to the mix.

    • @jaysimoes3705
      @jaysimoes3705 Před rokem

      @@JeppeBeier Where to start....I have met so many Danes in reallife living in The Netherlands that one thing is clear: Danes are so similar that on most occasions I never realised they were not Dutch. They talk fluent (I mean 99.9% fluent) in a very short time.
      I never realised Jan Heinze was a Dane, a friend of mine had the exact same thing with Dennis Rommedahl. We both actually asked oneanother why either of them was not playing in the Dutch national team. Me in 1985 and he in 2000.
      I think ti is really funny. When Americans mix us up and say Amsterdam is the capital of Denmark or Denmark is in The NEtherland both Dutch and Danes see it as a great example of how uneducated they are. Meanwhile we go to great lengths in saying how different we are. And we make the same mistake, also due to the lack of knowledge and basic lack of interest in eachother. Because the fact that Americans mix us up. for the wrong reasons does not mean that they are completely wrong. I have not seen one country in Europe that is even remotely as similar to my country as Denmark is.
      But the fact (I think) is that we have no interest in Denmark or Scandinavia. We don't care about any country in Europe and feel no connection to any other country than our own. And Danes I guess are first and foremost Danes and then probably Scandinavians. I think they also have no interest in either Germany or The NEtherlands. Which means we know very little about oneanother, not even that for whatever reason we are culturally geographically and linguistically (very) close.

    • @JeppeBeier
      @JeppeBeier Před rokem

      @@jaysimoes3705 Yeah our countries probably do have some similarities. I'd say Danes in general know more about Germany and has more relations with Germany than we do The Netherlands, so I don't know how similar Denmark and The Netherlands are.

  • @magnusnorden
    @magnusnorden Před rokem +2

    the language in finland belongs to a completely different group of languages compared to swedish/danish/norwegian - so 'scandinavian' languages is 'the same' but not 'nordic'

  • @reeb3687
    @reeb3687 Před rokem +3

    1. Danish doesn't round its "u" sounds and when "d" is at the end of some words it kinda curves
    2. The "i" sound in Swedish has a really distinct sound and the "sj" makes a sound thats pretty unique to Swedish, and otherwise sounds a little more similar to Norwegian than Danish
    3. The vowel system in Norwegian, except for maybe the "u" and "ø" sound, is more similar to an English accent I would say, especially Northern English / Scotts

  • @SilYe87
    @SilYe87 Před rokem +5

    cool video, Norwegian and Danish are very similar in writing but not in the way we speak. Swedish is a lot like us in pronunciation. Finnish language , no one in Scandianavia understands 🤣

  • @sofiamoilanen
    @sofiamoilanen Před rokem +1

    She actually performed well having no similarities with either language, good job!

  • @thelizardthatkatyaburnt4743

    In sweden we often say that norwegian is swedish but happier (and with some just wild card words) and danish is just norwegian but with a whole potato in your mouth.

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +1

      Funny, most Norwegians thing Swedish is NOrwegian but happier. Ok then! Let's be happy together! SKÅL!

    • @billburrcorner2727
      @billburrcorner2727 Před rokem

      In Denmark we say that Sweden is just the worst part of Denmark

  • @bananenmusli2769
    @bananenmusli2769 Před rokem +3

    I guessed all of the 3, because I watched a performance of an Icelandic comedian and he pretty much described how the nordic languages sound, so it was quite easy.

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +1

      I think I know what you mean, and it's a pretty epic skit

  • @debrickashaw9387
    @debrickashaw9387 Před rokem +10

    Really dont understand how you can confuse finnish with the scandinavian languages. They are extremely different to Finnish. It has an entirely different linguistic background andd origin. It would be like confusing german with italian

    • @RabbitShirak
      @RabbitShirak Před rokem +1

      Lack of exposure perhaps?

    • @debrickashaw9387
      @debrickashaw9387 Před rokem +5

      @@RabbitShirak complete lack of exposure* hear finnish and scandinavian languages ONCE and you should be able to tell they are wildely different

    • @RabbitShirak
      @RabbitShirak Před rokem +2

      @@debrickashaw9387 not, if your exposure to those languages is small.

    • @debrickashaw9387
      @debrickashaw9387 Před rokem +3

      @@RabbitShirak yeah, completely non existent i agree. hear 1 word and that should be sufficient unless your parents are siblings

    • @01blaval
      @01blaval Před rokem

      She said she’s never heard finnish

  • @mbexplosivetraining3715

    Me encantó el video! Good vídeo!

  • @kristineflunes7024
    @kristineflunes7024 Před rokem +5

    Just a kind reminder that the nordics include Finland and Iceland too :D Norway, Sweden and Denmark = Scandinavia.

  • @helle_larsen
    @helle_larsen Před rokem +23

    I think with the Norwegian girl, since she is using an accent, it can sound a bit different from what Norwegian learners would learn in lessons, which is closer to the written language. As a Norwegian, even I at times have a hard time understanding some of the other accents than my own

    • @thespankmyfrank
      @thespankmyfrank Před rokem +13

      Her accent is super clear for me as a Swede though! There are certain Norwegian accents I don't understand whatsoever but hers was really easy to get.

    • @Augenatic
      @Augenatic Před rokem

      what kind of accent is it? I understood it really well as a dane

    • @helle_larsen
      @helle_larsen Před rokem +3

      @@Augenatic I might not get the specific city right but Trøndersk is the accent I believe it is the closest to. I'm from the capital so I speak the accent that is the closest to the written language.

    • @helle_larsen
      @helle_larsen Před rokem +1

      @@thespankmyfrank I agree! I am from Oslo so for me anything that is extremely different from the written language is hard for me to understand, but then again I have an easier time understanding Swedish and Danish actually.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před rokem +9

      @@helle_larsen It feels that you confuse accent with dialect. Accent is just the melody (prosody), while differences in vocabulary or full syllables missing/added/changed are dialectal.

  • @danmyh
    @danmyh Před rokem +6

    Scandinavian languages are more closely related to Hindi and Albanian rather than Finnish, one trick to find out is to look at numbers

    • @TullaRask
      @TullaRask Před rokem +3

      That is the massivly big Indo-European language group which Finnish does not belong to.

    • @oskich
      @oskich Před rokem +2

      Finnish has tons of Swedish loanwords though, which makes it a bit understandable. (Finland and Sweden was same country for 700 years up until 1809).

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier Před rokem +2

    We have different ways of saying "r" in different parts of Norway (and Sweden too apparently) so a bit tough to recognize us by that.
    Norwegian is often considered somewhat "sing-songy" though.
    Both Norwegian and Swedish is semi-tonal languages, but I think that is more pronounced in Norwegian then Swedish.

    • @Magnus_Loov
      @Magnus_Loov Před rokem

      I think Swedish is considered more sing-songy. It goes up and down more compared to Norwegian which goes up towards the end mostly (making it sound "happy").
      Lot's of dialects in both Swedish and Norwegian though were the tone (sing-songing) varies a lot. In northern Sweden close to Finland we have some very monotonic speakers.
      In the city of Gothenburg or the landscape of Värmland we go up more in tone towards the end of sentences more resembling Norwegian. People of Gotland have a very different tone too. As do Skåne.
      And lets not forget about Dalarna. The Swedish chef that is singing in the muppets show was inspired from a Dalecarlian who visited USA in the 70:s and often guested a TV talkshow as, yes, a Swedish chef. He was bad at English and speaked with a very singy-songy Dalecarlian dialect when doing cooking presentations! (Extremely funny come think of it actually)
      Danish is the the most monotone of all the Nordic languages though.

  • @mrrazz00
    @mrrazz00 Před rokem +2

    At 2:00. This must be the first time I've ever heard anyone say that Danish is a beautiful language... In the rest of Scandinavia we say that Danish is a "speaking disorder". 😉😄 They have their porridge stuck in the throat... God bless Denmark though!! 😀

  • @Jonasnhj
    @Jonasnhj Před rokem +3

    Im getting the feeling that this girl doesnt know that Denmark is a northern country and isnt next to the Netherlands

    • @debbyao
      @debbyao Před rokem

      The funny thing is. Im Norwegian and I can understand some words they speak in Netherland. Denmark is close to Germany and Germany is next to Netherland😊

  • @oscarsm86
    @oscarsm86 Před rokem +5

    Norwegian and especially Danish were very easy for me, but the Swedish was very confusing

  • @yoannamekhail7076
    @yoannamekhail7076 Před rokem

    It was so fun watching this vid, I’m from Sweden 🇸🇪 and I’m there rn,! I actually could understand Norwegian even tho I can’t Norwegian. Did you know that the year 1400-1700 Sweden owned Norway 🇳🇴

  • @anderssigeklint8739
    @anderssigeklint8739 Před rokem +1

    The way the Danes use their tongues is what makes it complicated for us swedes to understand them. But the most norwegian i think is no problem to talk with in our different languages and still understand eachother. All three languages is almost the same as you can se if you look at it in written form. We are one people in blod and share same ancestors. But the Finns are a total different etnicity with a total different language. But because our shared history ewen the Finns are part of our nordic family. They are the adopted sibling we love as mutch as we love our other familymembers.

  • @666radiodemonalastor
    @666radiodemonalastor Před rokem +11

    I’m learning Norwegian(bokmål) at the moment and I can’t believe I understood Danish faster than Norwegian 💀

    • @meisrerboot
      @meisrerboot Před rokem +5

      Wait until the dialects hit you

    • @kaiandreas1990
      @kaiandreas1990 Před rokem +3

      First you learn Norwegian, then you have to learn the dialect where you are moving 😅 it is different everywhere.

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +1

      Welcome to Norwegian dialect hell my man xD

  • @illicitnarcotics
    @illicitnarcotics Před rokem +3

    These are the Scandinavian languages, not the Nordic ones. The Scandinavian languages: Swedish, danish, Norwegian.
    Nordic languages: Swedish, danish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Finnish, Faroese and Greenlandic

    • @kraken5003
      @kraken5003 Před rokem +1

      all of these languages are within the nordic list that you provided,
      so saying 'not the nordic languages' when they are all nordic languages makes no sense
      also this isn't a geographical area, (or whatever you consider 'scandinavian') this isn't how linguistics work.. 'swedish,danish,norwegian,icelandic and faroese are all within the same linguistic group..finnish and greenlandic are not

  • @lilog2521
    @lilog2521 Před rokem +1

    They should have called the video “skandinavian languages” because Finland and Iceland is also Nordic countries, and they a very different than Norway, Sweden and Denmark:))
    But great video

  • @viktorabrahamsson9303
    @viktorabrahamsson9303 Před rokem +1

    Im so glad that the swedish girl had a swedish dialect that dont pronounce the rs that often. Like my own dialect, Småländska. Only happy because she said that swedes have the specific r.

  • @liukin95
    @liukin95 Před rokem +6

    Poor Iceland didn't even get a look-in here lol

  • @ludvigsilva1
    @ludvigsilva1 Před rokem +13

    Hei, jeg er mexicansk men jeg vet snakker litt norsk og svensk 😊 jag talar en litte svenska också!!

    • @Roreytko
      @Roreytko Před rokem +3

      Vad duktig du är 😊!

    • @ludvigsilva1
      @ludvigsilva1 Před rokem +1

      @@Roreytko Hej på dej 👋🏽 jag älskar språk!

    • @Roreytko
      @Roreytko Před rokem +1

      @@ludvigsilva1 me gusta 🙂

  • @MimiGemReacts
    @MimiGemReacts Před rokem +1

    Norwegian BOKMÅL is based on the Danish Language, and Norwegian NYNORSK was put together by Ivar Aasen. This are the two writing forms in Norway, but the people who live here talks in differnet dialects, there is a saying that Bokmål is Danish and Nynorsk is Norwegian. There are so many different dialects here and there can be different dialects with only a 20 minutes drive from where you are.
    Also Norway, Danmark and Sweden all have the Æ,Ø,Å but they are a bit different in Swedish (I don't have them on my keybord though here)
    Norwegians tend to understand Swedish very well when spoken, and are able to read Danish very well. But we can all communicate rather well with each other.
    A typical Norwegian thing to do is to drive over to Sweden on a "Harrytur" and shop, because candy, soda, alkohol and some foods tends to be cheaper over there XD For me those are the best trips! It's so cozy, driving with either friends or family. Also a lot of Norwegians will go on a "Dansketur". where we take the boat over to Danmark, mainly to shop alkohol and candy on the boat and go straight home. and the trip will take about 8 hours or so :)

  • @oliviaalma2822
    @oliviaalma2822 Před rokem

    I’m from norway! Love the video☺️

  • @Rubbe87
    @Rubbe87 Před rokem +4

    I am Swedish I could tell where they came from by just looking before they even said anything.

  • @enriquegonzaga3865
    @enriquegonzaga3865 Před rokem +14

    Denmark next to The Netherlands. 🇳🇱🇩🇰🤣 Yes of course and my country Spain is next to Germany.
    It is just a country between us. 😂😂😂

  • @bufferl
    @bufferl Před rokem +3

    as a german native speaker i understand and pick up some words from the scandinavian language. it's funny to hear in norwegian they say "Ja" in german also "ja" to yes and "nei", in german: "nein" to no :-)

  • @machjiffy4710
    @machjiffy4710 Před rokem +2

    Scandinavian women are so pretty, the really blonde hair dark blue eyes goes deep into my soul every time.

  • @Seung217
    @Seung217 Před rokem +7

    I feel like a genius as i study scandinavian studies

  • @techfairyrina
    @techfairyrina Před rokem +5

    I am so in love with Nordic languages ))

  • @juanestebangaviriaotavo4469

    For a future video, it would be great if they played broken telephone with phrases or words from different countries, or the country of each player, it would be very funny and fun😊

  • @Mavve69
    @Mavve69 Před rokem +28

    As a Swede I could recognized Danish instantly

    • @kebman
      @kebman Před rokem +4

      As a Norwegian I could recognized Swedish instant coffee from IKEA Edit: Sorry this will be my last joke for the day tjäna and skål!

    • @ILOVESUMMERXOXO5
      @ILOVESUMMERXOXO5 Před rokem

      Im also a Swede but i couldnt recognize Danish. Lol.

    • @isaacjm7310
      @isaacjm7310 Před rokem +1

      @@ILOVESUMMERXOXO5 yeah danish is the weardist language

    • @kimdresner183
      @kimdresner183 Před rokem +3

      As a person from Danmark do I understand danish

    • @01blaval
      @01blaval Před rokem

      I could recognize that they were languages….

  • @adipy8912
    @adipy8912 Před rokem +3

    Yes! Finally the Scandinavian countries came together.

  • @The.Metal.Thrasher
    @The.Metal.Thrasher Před měsícem

    In Swedish, the thick "R" comes from the Scanian region which is the southern regions of Sweden (Skåne, Halland and Blekinge). Scania coming from the Latin name given to the region by the Roman explorers. Scania is also where the name Scandinavia originates from, however some sources suggest the name Scandinavia deriving from the old Norse language in Norse mythology from the giantess Skaði to describe the vast open land area. And yes, Scania is also a truck company nowadays.

  • @shilomclain8773
    @shilomclain8773 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I’m a Danish woman, and every time I’m in another country and they hear me speak in Danish, they always ask; “are you from Germany?”
    (On a few occasions, they guess Sweden)

  • @sebastiangade
    @sebastiangade Před rokem +32

    Btw Finnish isn't anywhere close the the Scandinavian languages (which are Danish, Swedish and Norwegian). Finnish, to a Scandinavian person sounds closer to Slavic than it does to Scandinavian

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe Před rokem +34

      Finnish languages (and Estonian and Sami languages) belongs to their own language group. They have nothing what so ever to do with slavic languages and these two groups are not even near related to each other. Slavic and German languages are more related to each other than any finnish-ugric language.

    • @sebastiangade
      @sebastiangade Před rokem +6

      @@johnnorthtribe Yeah ok you're right, but to a Scandinavian ear it sounds more Slavic than Scandinavian, that's more what I meant :))

    • @anni8456
      @anni8456 Před rokem +17

      Please do not spread misinformation and edit your original comment.
      Swedish, Norwegian and Danish are related to Slavic languages but Finnish is not. Finnish is a Uralic language (a list of some Uralic languages: Sami, Finnish, Estonian, Hungarian, Karelian, Veps, Mari, Udmurt, Mansi and other indigenous languages in Siberia) and Swedish, Norwegian and Danish are Indo-European languages (a list of some Indo-European languages: Norwegian, Russian, Hindi, Greek, Spanish, English, Gaelic, Albanian, Lithuanian, French, Persian, Polish, Romanian etc.)

    • @sebastiangade
      @sebastiangade Před rokem +1

      @@anni8456 I have done it now dw :)

    • @fgranlun
      @fgranlun Před rokem +3

      @Anni Yeah, point is it's not a Scandinavian language, Finland isn't even a Scandinavian country since it's not located on the Scandinavian peninsula. It's a country all by itself, with its own identity. I wouldn't call Finland a Nordic country per se. The Swedish speaking parts are definitely Nordic though.

  • @jgagmgi
    @jgagmgi Před rokem +5

    Why not finnish in this video?
    PS: Scandinavian languages would be a lot more accurate name for this video

  • @christel7579
    @christel7579 Před rokem +1

    The "a" vowel she pronounced is literally something that clearly distincts Danish from Swedish and she has them switched.

  • @thenosyman8442
    @thenosyman8442 Před rokem +3

    "Nordic languages" but forgets Icelandic, Faroese, Greenlandic and Sapmi (even Sapmi is too much but it would be fun to throw in Meänkieli as a wild card)

  • @effyshe
    @effyshe Před rokem +17

    as someone learning swedish i’m so happy i guessed the swedish girl right 😭

    • @Olivia-ny6nl
      @Olivia-ny6nl Před rokem +4

      Well done. Why did you decide to study Swedish? 😊

    • @effyshe
      @effyshe Před rokem +3

      @@Olivia-ny6nl cuz i’m useless and just want to be good at something 😭

    • @Olivia-ny6nl
      @Olivia-ny6nl Před rokem +5

      @@effyshe Ahahaa I’m sure that’s not true. Lycka till med att lära dig svenska föresten. Ha kul! That’s the most important thing to have fun 🇸🇪

    • @effyshe
      @effyshe Před rokem +4

      @@Olivia-ny6nl tack så mycket

    • @just_a_guy_on_yt3853
      @just_a_guy_on_yt3853 Před rokem +4

      Kul att du lär dig svenska, lycka till!!

  • @charlottebghandersen4195

    Finish is a whole other language stem than the Scandinavian languages.

  • @WilhelminaNynas
    @WilhelminaNynas Před rokem

    you should do the other languages that we speak in the northern countries as well like finnish, finlandswedish, icelandic, greenlandic and faroese

  • @Oliver-qr6ow
    @Oliver-qr6ow Před rokem +4

    Swedish and Norwegian is beautiful languages

  • @the-chow-hall
    @the-chow-hall Před rokem +6

    More of the Swedes please! :D

  • @katea8147
    @katea8147 Před rokem +6

    Can you make more videos with Norwegians in please?