Europeans are shocked by the Swedish brand Pronunciation differences

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  • čas přidán 14. 03. 2024
  • Today We tried to pronounce the Swedish Brand Name!
    Did you pronounce it right?
    Hope you Enjoyed our video!
    And follow us guests!
    GB - Roisin @_roisinmoran
    DE - Jessica @myseoullife.yt
    BE - Lisa @lisabcm
    SE - Hanna @hannahjalmar
    PL - Ayliee @ayliee_k
    FR - Max @max.balian.7
    #uk #germany #belgium #sweden #poland #france
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Komentáře • 295

  • @mikesade6214
    @mikesade6214 Před měsícem +521

    As a Swede i am absolutely stunned she didnt know Spotify is swedish, I am sure 99,999% in her age group in sweden know that

    • @jagcf
      @jagcf Před měsícem +20

      Hon är nog för ung. Spotify blev stort runt 2010ish, så vi som var med då (unga vuxna) visste såklart.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před měsícem +1

      I'm Swedish, and I hardly know what it is.

    • @pelleonore1795
      @pelleonore1795 Před měsícem +20

      ​@@herrbonk3635 how do u even listen to music?!

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před měsícem +7

      @@pelleonore1795When I don't play it myself, it's mainly downloaded concerts from CZcams (a fantastic source of good material, old and new). And of course CDs, LPs, cassettes.

    • @pelleonore1795
      @pelleonore1795 Před měsícem +9

      @@herrbonk3635 so ur old🤡 not to sound rude

  • @anomalix
    @anomalix Před měsícem +304

    I feel like they started at the wrong end, they should have finished with the "right" pronunciation

    • @azaldie
      @azaldie Před měsícem +9

      Yes - and probably in isolation, then have them as a group listen back to the way they said it without external influence and discuss from there.

  • @naitsade
    @naitsade Před měsícem +91

    The swedish word for "and" is "och" (pronounced as 'ock' in hockey), BUT in common mouth you can often just say "o" or "å" (pronounced like the O in 'born').
    Now, a simple hard "H" in swedish is pronounced kinda like "Hå" (again with the O in 'born'). So, the the way "H" is pronunced in H&M does already bake in the & sound as the Å in HÅ.
    Så H&M = "Hå-M" or "Ho-M"

    • @Bismarck-S
      @Bismarck-S Před měsícem +8

      I was reflecting over this as well as they said it. You technically say the "&", but it blends in to well and so the convenience of just saying the two letters bu them selves takes over.

    • @sibolt89
      @sibolt89 Před měsícem

      Bara mer förvirrande av denna kommentar

    • @philipsoderstedt9885
      @philipsoderstedt9885 Před měsícem +4

      @@sibolt89Det är inte lätt när det är svårt.

    • @Hammpedampe
      @Hammpedampe Před měsícem +3

      @@sibolt89HåM
      H å M
      H & M

    • @sibolt89
      @sibolt89 Před měsícem

      @@philipsoderstedt9885 om du kommer från usa och läser den kommentaren så blir dem förvirrade. det fattas väl vem som helst men uppenbarligen inte

  • @herrbonk3635
    @herrbonk3635 Před měsícem +73

    Not sure these girls realize names like Spotify and Oatly are in English... even though the companies are Swedish.

    • @CEOFluxii
      @CEOFluxii Před měsícem +4

      WTF u mean lmao, spotify is not even a real "Word", its a made up word for their company so i dont know what ur talking about lmao

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před měsícem +17

      @@CEOFluxiiSo what? The pronunciation is totally american. If it was Swedish, the o-sound would be a long vowel instead of a short, and the last part would sound lite "fy" instead of like "faij".

    • @CEOFluxii
      @CEOFluxii Před měsícem

      this is total nonsense as its still not a real word... Why try explain pronunciation of a word that doesn't even exist in the word book, stop it...@@herrbonk3635

    • @Merecir
      @Merecir Před měsícem +10

      ​@@CEOFluxii Spotify obviously comes from "spot" (to find) -ify.
      So if we still base it on the English word spot, the proper Swedish bending would be "Spotifirera".
      The pure Swedish version would be "Hittifiera". (based on 'hitta' (to find))

    • @mikebrown41182
      @mikebrown41182 Před měsícem

      @@herrbonk3635Varför just amerikanskt? Kanske Ifs har något med att du associerar engelska med den generaliserade amerikanska dialekten. Och de flesta i Sverige säger ju ändå Spott i FAI. Inte särkilt likt vad amerikanarna från olika stater säger när de uttalar det, än mindre britterna. Men det finns ju givetvis undertoner och delade ord. Men samtidigt som någon skrev ovan, det är ju ett ord som inte finns i ordlistan, det är ju en sammansättning av spot and identify.

  • @HenrikJansson78
    @HenrikJansson78 Před měsícem +81

    Quite fun at the end there when the swedish girl talked about how we almost sing when we speak, it was so easy to hear it. Even her english went up and down in tone all the time. :)

    • @SZJZ0
      @SZJZ0 Před měsícem +4

      Well its obviously a lie. Its hard to say ”this is how swedes speak” since there is so many different dialects in Sweden. So you cant just make assumptions

    • @HenrikJansson78
      @HenrikJansson78 Před měsícem +23

      @@SZJZ0And no matter the dialect we still speak with different tones. At least I don't think there are any swedish dialects that doesn't.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před měsícem +14

      @@SZJZ0She talks about the standard dialect around the capital of course, just like you do for any language.

    • @loris-bismar
      @loris-bismar Před měsícem

      ​​​@@SZJZ0så vafan menar du? Är du helt entonig konstant när du pratar och inga av de ord du säger har olika betydelser ifall du betonar olika delar av ordet annorlunda eller? Det är inte en lögn, din jävla pappskalle. Alla de tre skandinaviska språken är tonbaserade språk och för folk utanför Skandinavien låter det som om att vi sjunger. Detta är inte ett fenomen som bara händer runt Stockholm. Jag har hört det sägas till mig 100 tals gånger och jag är från Göteborg. Alla olika dialekter är sin egna melodi, men nog fan är den där alltid. Det är ju melodin man lär sig om man skall härma en dialekt, språket kan man ju redan. Fan att man skall behöva förklara en sån här självklar sak för vuxna människor är ju helt jävla otroligt...

    • @nugget2366
      @nugget2366 Před měsícem +4

      ​@@SZJZ0 only 1 accent of Swedish doesn't have a pitch accent

  • @bigjtq9176
    @bigjtq9176 Před měsícem +13

    Please note that the original name of H&M was Hennes "och" Mauritz.
    "Hennes" translates to "Her's" in English, was formed in Västerås, 1947 and then bought the hunters and men's clothes company "Maurittz Widforss", 1968. The new company was re-branded as Hennes & Maurittz.
    That was then shorten when the brand went international to just H&M back in the 70's...

    • @Cheva-Pate
      @Cheva-Pate Před měsícem +3

      My mom when she was going to shop at HM she said ”Hennes”

    • @CEOFluxii
      @CEOFluxii Před měsícem +1

      Its still called "Hennes "och" Mauritz" technically, H&M is literally just a shortcut for it...

    • @bigjtq9176
      @bigjtq9176 Před měsícem +1

      If you don't know, now you have the reason 😊​@@Cheva-Pate

    • @bigjtq9176
      @bigjtq9176 Před měsícem

      ​I would say, most Swedes today, simply say HM, with no "and" in between...​@@CEOFluxii

  • @vicolin6126
    @vicolin6126 Před měsícem +49

    H&M in Swedish is very easy to say, as the "&"-sound is replaced by how we pronounce the letter "H".
    In Swedish, the letter "H" is pronounced (with Swedish letters) as "Hå". To explain this in text would be quite difficult, but lets say for English speakers this would translate to "Hoo". In Swedish, the word for "and" is "och" - the short spoken version of this word is just the letter "O", but it is pronounced more like the Swedish letter "Å" (which coincidentally is pronounced like the "O" in the English word "more").
    All of this leads back to H&M - we actually DO say the "&"-part - but it is masked by how we say the letter "H". Think "Hå-M", and there you have it.
    Hope that makes sense for you non-Swedes :)

    • @jiansonz
      @jiansonz Před měsícem +3

      I'm a swede, and I say "Hå-Å-Em"

    • @paxe.j.1723
      @paxe.j.1723 Před měsícem +5

      I dont pronounce the &. I always read it as HM. As a swede

    • @Magnus_Loov
      @Magnus_Loov Před měsícem +1

      Nah, if we would say the "Å" in H&M then it would be three syllables. H, Å, M. Now it is just two. The letter "H" just happens to be spelt "Hå" by itself.
      By the way, we also say "O" sometimes instead of "Å" for "Och". ÖoB is a good example of a company that is spelt like that with an "O" instead of an "Å".

    • @jiansonz
      @jiansonz Před měsícem

      @@Magnus_Loov Yes, I say it in three syllables.

  • @micscwisby7798
    @micscwisby7798 Před měsícem +41

    You should have mentioned Björn Borg.

    • @Fistfury42
      @Fistfury42 Před měsícem +9

      Stop talking about my underwear!

    • @Vacxt
      @Vacxt Před měsícem

      @@Fistfury42o.O

    • @Gigusx
      @Gigusx Před měsícem

      @@Vacxt Man, I've worn mine for years, those are really good boxers.

  • @sylvassasalladsbestick1342
    @sylvassasalladsbestick1342 Před měsícem +6

    Depending on the dialect, mind you. Some Swedes pronounce the Rs more.
    The As in Klarna are different vowel sounds all together. Sweden has 9 vowel letters, but 18-22 vowel sounds (depending on the dialect). This is usually shown by the number of consonants following the vowel. Hat - long a (means "hate", "hatred"). Hatt - short a (means "hat"). This is tricky though, as the following consonants aren't always the same. Gammal = old (singular). Gamla = old (plural). Both words have short A-sounds.
    The K sounds depend more on the surrounding vowels than which part of the word they're in. Soft vowels (eiyäö) change the k into a sh-sound. Kilometer is pronounced "shilometer". Hard vowels (aouå) get a regular, hard k-sound. There are other consonants/consonant clusters that also change depending on the vowel sounds, like G and SK. (Loanwords sometimes don't follow these rules.)
    The sing-songy sound of the language comes from our pitch accents. There's two different pitch accents (accute and grave), and they can change the meaning of a word completely. Buren could mean either "carried" or "the cage". Stegen could mean "the ladder" or "the steps". Most Swedes are blissfully unaware of this, and will tell you that it's stress. (It isn't.)

    • @stekeln
      @stekeln Před 19 dny +1

      The worst part is that pitch accents aren't carried over at all (or at least not consistently) to compound words, meaning that e.g. "kedjeburen" could mean either "carried by chains" or "the cage of/for chains", and "trappstegen" could mean either "the staircase" or "the stair steps".

    • @Voidova
      @Voidova Před 6 hodinami +1

      Also the melodic rhythm comes from the "rikssvenska" dialect. I live in northern Sweden and the dialects here aren't nearly as melodic.

  • @nathalielf1338
    @nathalielf1338 Před měsícem +10

    Max takes it easy in this vidéo ! 😴 He has a little advantage since the Belgian girl spells out the marks before he does 😂
    Thanks to everyone, participants and technical team🌸

  • @megi671
    @megi671 Před měsícem +10

    How have they never heard of Scania, have they not been on the road in Europe? hahahah

  • @Airbuzz
    @Airbuzz Před měsícem +13

    Västerås represent! 🤘😎🤘

  • @LessThanThree76
    @LessThanThree76 Před měsícem +5

    What a shame they didn’t have a broader spectrum of countries/languages in the panel. Liike Finnish, Greek, Spanish, Italian, Hungarian, Russian etc.

    • @handsomeKz
      @handsomeKz Před 29 dny +1

      Exactly to have a French Belgish girl (she sound more French speaking compare to Dutch) and a French guy is no bigger diffrent. Choulery maybe switch out the Polish girl to an Austrian one and the British one to a Swizz and we got a thin language spread 😳🙄🤷‍♂️

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 Před 15 dny

      @@handsomeKz I agree on changing the French speaking girl to a Dutch. I think we can keep the Polish since she's the only slav. England can stay since they differ from rest of Europe.

  • @alfaDude156
    @alfaDude156 Před měsícem +5

    Tbh, Soptify and Oatly are brands based on english words and Volvo and Scania are a latin words. Zenica is, swiss (?)

    • @hellmalm
      @hellmalm Před měsícem +1

      Swedish Astra bought the Swiss Zenica making AstraZenica, it’s now owned by the British. Spotify is actually not based on English but the word was chosen/“made up” because it would be easy to pronounce for most people, this is something I was informed about this, being one of the first Alfa-testers back in 2008.

    • @Merecir
      @Merecir Před měsícem +1

      @@hellmalmAnd yet, most of the English meanings of 'spot' fits with what the app does.

  • @maximebalian5772
    @maximebalian5772 Před měsícem +18

    Thank you it's always a pleasure to shoot with you 🎉😊

  • @JuliuszBaczynski
    @JuliuszBaczynski Před měsícem +4

    They where surpriced the enlish word play Spotify sounded similar across the countrys, I can’t breathe 2:50 😂

  • @jahern4597
    @jahern4597 Před měsícem +21

    Fascinating , who knew that there was variance in pronunciation between different countries. Truly mind blowing stuff.

  • @SIperianSusi83
    @SIperianSusi83 Před měsícem +11

    True story: H&M is colloquially Henkka-Maukka in Finnish.

    • @3H3H3H
      @3H3H3H Před měsícem +3

      Damn Finnish pronunciation has nothing to do with Swedish speech, unrelated, totally Asian.

    • @SIperianSusi83
      @SIperianSusi83 Před měsícem +4

      @@3H3H3H Colloquialism is not about pronunciation, it's about casual speech. And yes, Finnish and Swedish are 100% unrelated languages as they belong to different language trees.

    • @3H3H3H
      @3H3H3H Před měsícem +1

      ​@@SIperianSusi83💋💋💋💋💋🌹🌷🌷🌹💋💋

    • @3H3H3H
      @3H3H3H Před měsícem +1

      ​​@@SIperianSusi83I loved your cultural awakening, it was to wake you up, you spoke my language my cute Finnish I love you,and Finland, it was a casual affectionate speech with the Swedish company, and that Finnish speech of cultural assimilation, sounds very ingrian, vepsia, sami, Livonian but it is very distant to Swedish linguisitc tonality, I'm glad you caught the spirit of the joke 💋😉 and of course the Finns are very welcoming with the neighboring cultures I love this Asian side of the Finns are open to New different realities in the world, many European cultures are not so far hugs on you 💋🌷🌹🌹😉💋💗🤭😉

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před měsícem

      ​@@SIperianSusi83The syntax and grammars are totally unrelated, yes.
      But Swedish has a dozen Finnish loan words, while Finnish uses thousands of words based on old Swedish and/or Low German.

  • @jonasvogel6875
    @jonasvogel6875 Před měsícem +3

    But the Polish girl would probably be the only one who could properly pronounce the name of the CEO of Klarna

  • @magnusnilsson9792
    @magnusnilsson9792 Před 25 dny +1

    How to pronounce Å, Ä & Ö in French:
    bourdeaux = bordå
    merde = märd
    bleu = blö

  • @Ane_Rikke
    @Ane_Rikke Před 19 dny

    Well done lady! You rock :)
    I love that you want to show us the little things as well. And I love flowers and greensuff. So if I had one wish I would love that you showed them properly/held shots of them a smidge longer so I can actually see the pretties when you film them 🌸🍀🌿 ( But I absolutely understand that that might not be where your mind’s at when you are soaked and tiered and being rained on! 🌬️)

  • @kimjohansson9064
    @kimjohansson9064 Před měsícem +1

    I'd love to see one where there is a scanian swede (Souwth swedish) since the accent is very different and pretty much anyone from south sweden can do a generic swedish accent but so far I've only met one non south swedish person able to immitate a south swedish accent.
    It would be especially intresting in seeing it in comparison to the french based accents since the south swedish accent is based on french and danish. Unless you are from Lund because people from Lund does not speak with a south swedish accent, it's pretty much just the accent of their parents (that are usually not from south sweden) with a south swedish tinge since Lund is very much a student city.
    Edit: I saw some earlier videos with Tess as the Swedish representative and all I can say is, the south swedish accend is thick there and I personally love it :)

  • @kilanspeaks
    @kilanspeaks Před měsícem +11

    As an Indonesian I can’t say that I’ve heard of Klarna and Scania, but I’m more or less familiar with the rest of the brands although like the people in this video I didn’t know they were Swedish either 😆
    1:40 Oh wait, IKEA might be an exception to this. I think everyone knows that it’s from Sweden. But if you ask random people they would probably answer with some random Scandinavian country 😁
    2:41 Yeah most would just assume Spotify is American or something 😆
    4:56 I’ve seen Oatly sometimes in some grocery store’s imported section, and yeah the brand sounds like it’s in English just like Spotify.
    5:36 Of course we know Volvo but I don’t think many people know that it’s from Sweden. Most would know that it’s from some European country, but wouldn’t know which one.
    5:59 Ericsson used to be a big player, not sure if they’re still around?
    7:15 Haha yeah AstraZeneca, can’t believe it was years ago! But yeah, didn’t know that it’s from Sweden.
    8:09 Fjallraven is very popular among young people, but I think most would only vaguely know that it’s from some Scandinavian country 😅
    9:48 Same thing, Acne Studios is popular among the younger generation, but I doubt people would know where it’s from because the name is just in English.
    10:28 I don’t know much about Arket but I do know that it’s available online.
    10:51 H&M is everywhere but most people probably think that it’s from the US or something 😂

    • @komocka
      @komocka Před měsícem +8

      Scania is the 8th biggest truck manufacturers in the world

    • @kilanspeaks
      @kilanspeaks Před měsícem

      @@komockaOK cool, it’s probably popular in Europe or something 👍

    • @luancsf123
      @luancsf123 Před měsícem +6

      ​@@kilanspeaks yes, in Brazil this is also a very popular brand. In my city, there's even a Scania factory.

    • @kilanspeaks
      @kilanspeaks Před měsícem +2

      @@luancsf123 I see, I guess we are more familiar with Asian brands although I looked it up and apparently there are plans to open a Scania manufacturing facility in Indonesia. Good for them, because we do have a huge population.

    • @Ercarret
      @Ercarret Před měsícem +1

      Spotify is kind of a nonsense word unless I've missed some kind of hidden meaning. There's not really a "Swedish" way to pronounce it since it's not a Swedish word per se. Compare it to Ericsson (a Swedish surname) or Fjällräven (which is the Swedish word for "arctic fox"), both of which have distinct Swedish pronunciations.
      Meanwhile, Oatly leans into the English word "oat" since it's an oat-based milk, so it's no wonder that everyone pronounces it the English way. If it had been called Havrely instead ("havre" being the Swedish word for "oat"), there would probably have been more varied pronunciations. 😃
      Funnily enough, I had to look up both Acne Studios and Arket on Google. I had no idea what kind of brands they were, despite being Swedish. 😅

  • @anttirytkonen11
    @anttirytkonen11 Před měsícem +6

    🇫🇮 I wish 🇫🇮 Nokia and 🇸🇪 Ericsson still dominated the cellphone market. 😜 I still would buy only their descendant mobile products, I mean HMD (Nokia branded phones and tablets) or Sony Xperia phones (formerly Ericsson/Sony Ericsson). I have never had a phone from any other brand.

    • @AjZ530
      @AjZ530 Před měsícem +1

      I remember I had the sony experia one with the fold out keyboard lol, I thought I was so cool

  • @andyx6827
    @andyx6827 Před měsícem +19

    The Polish girl is trying so hard to portay German as being different all the time 😅😂🤣

    • @Jason0424-gt2vs
      @Jason0424-gt2vs Před měsícem +1

      Yea hahaha this polish girl got some flashbacks

    • @blackcrow4218
      @blackcrow4218 Před měsícem +4

      Because it is in most cases

    • @andyx6827
      @andyx6827 Před měsícem +5

      ​@@blackcrow4218 But in these cases it wasn't at all. German girl said Volvo exactly the same as the French/Belgian/Swedish people. Polish girl was by far the most different here, but went "Omg German is so different", like wtf 😂 And it isn't the first time that she did it. People are so brainwashed that they can't even listen properly anymore 😅

    • @blackcrow4218
      @blackcrow4218 Před měsícem +5

      @@andyx6827 Because it is Polish is Slavic language so it's definitely different than German . And what are you about? They all like eachother it's not a first time they are put together. In most cases they find something different that doesn't mean it's bad it's for fun dude chill . You really have some Prejudice for this Polish girl .

  • @user-lv3fu6vn1f
    @user-lv3fu6vn1f Před měsícem +8

    Fan of Max! 🤩🇫🇷

  • @Geaxuce
    @Geaxuce Před měsícem

    For the H&M part, we kind of do pronounce the and becasue we have a shortened form of the and "och" which a lot of people just say "o". The letter H is pronounced, if written would be "hå" or "hooa" as one syllable. So the fact that we drop "a" in the pronounciation of H&M means that we kind of meld the H and "o"ch

  • @affordsled
    @affordsled Před 23 dny

    Stunned that there are people not knowing about Scania. One of the world's largest truck and bus manufacturers.
    Also, imagine making a video with Sweden's most well-known brands and then not including Saab or Husqvarna…

  • @EddieReischl
    @EddieReischl Před 9 dny

    Vowel sounds must be confusing for people learning English. Especially in the US, the sound of an "a" can be all over the place, with the spelling never changing. The other countries are pretty consistent with the "ah" sound for an "a", with umlauts and double vowels changing the sound of the vowel.

  • @migrandin5221
    @migrandin5221 Před 29 dny +1

    H&M was originally two clothing companies, Hennes (women's clothing) and Mauritz (men's clothing) - I'm old enough to remember when thet merged and became H & M.

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 Před 6 dny +1

    I'm quite surprized Mojang didn't get mentioned in this video at all. Even though Micro$oft has bought Mojang several years ago they still program the original Minecraft in Stockholm, only the Bugrock edition and the spinoffs are programmed in Redmond, USA.
    Yes, I know it's called "Bedrock", but I don't like Microsoft or Minecraft Bedrock, so I misspell them like that on purpose, showing that I think Micro$oft is too money hungry and Minecraft Bugrock too buggy.

  • @exlex2576
    @exlex2576 Před měsícem

    You should consider doing a video with a french person discussing movie names. Many movie tiles where completely changed, mostly for marketing reasons, since at least until the 2010s, most French didn't really speak any other language or were really reluctant to do so. Due to this we got gems like: Rasta Rockets (cool runnings) or very bad trip (the hangover).
    Also, for some reasons, they used to add the words "sex" and "sexy" in half the movie names from the mid 90s to 2010. "Step Up" became "Sexy dance" or "Wildthings" is called "Sex Crimes".
    Check it out, it would make a great video.

  • @user-zv5ro8ol8z
    @user-zv5ro8ol8z Před měsícem +2

    North and South Belgium have completely different pronounciations
    (different language from different language family)

    • @robinverpoorten690
      @robinverpoorten690 Před měsícem

      French in Walonia and Flemish (kinda like Dutch) in the Flanders

    • @svenjonsson4275
      @svenjonsson4275 Před měsícem

      Same on Sweden but then the clip would have been över än hour long. 😂😂😂

  • @factsy7042
    @factsy7042 Před měsícem +9

    A Incomplete list of Swedish brands and Companies.
    Klarna
    Spotify
    IKEA
    Ericsson
    Nudie jeans
    H&M
    Oatly
    Volvo
    Scania
    Astra Zeneca
    Fjällräven
    Vagabond
    Saab
    Koenigsegg
    SKF
    Absolut Vodka
    Tetra Pak
    Electrolux
    Husqvarna
    Storytel
    Stena Line
    Mora
    WESC
    ARKET
    Hasselblad
    Securitas
    Marco Polo
    Abb
    SEB
    Assa Abloy
    Sandvik
    AGA

    • @marcusisacson
      @marcusisacson Před měsícem +3

      ...and actually many more! Bluetooth was founded by Ericsson and then financed by Ericsson, Nokia and a couple of other companies.

    • @factsy7042
      @factsy7042 Před měsícem

      Thats why I wrote Incomplete.@@marcusisacson

    • @loris-bismar
      @loris-bismar Před měsícem

      SEB e la varken ett märke eller ett företag? Känns onödigt att skriva med en bank på den listan annars har du ju Swedbank också 😂😂

    • @factsy7042
      @factsy7042 Před měsícem +2

      @@loris-bismar Jag hör att du inte mår så bra. Du är bitter vilket jag kan förstå. Va du mobbad när du va liten? Eller har du haft det tufft hemma? Att trycka ner andra för må bra själv hjälper bara kortsiktigt. Hoppas du kan börja må bättre.

    • @loris-bismar
      @loris-bismar Před měsícem +1

      @@factsy7042 bra försök, men inte detta fall så är du helt ute å cyklar. Vart i min kommentar försökte jag trycka ner dig? Det är en genuin fråga, varför skriva med en bank på en lista över märken och företag? Brukar du ofta känna dig som ett offer eller är du bara väldigt känslig i allmänt? Är det lite projektion som är i görningen här?

  • @PulkaSkurken
    @PulkaSkurken Před měsícem +1

    Some of the brands are words made for the Global market, like Spotify. that is not Swedish word at all.

  • @Robman92
    @Robman92 Před měsícem

    Swede here. Obviously I knew about most of these brands being Swedish but a few I didn’t know so that was educational 🙌

  • @siennakahlgren
    @siennakahlgren Před 17 dny

    In my swedish accent we say it more like the belgian girl, Klarna with a scorring r. Yay Skåne 🎉

  • @kevinkarlsson7440
    @kevinkarlsson7440 Před měsícem +5

    Why no Husqvarna????

    • @Betha783
      @Betha783 Před měsícem +3

      Fortunately we got the -arna in Klarna, which sounds the same in Husqvarna but we missed the Swedish -u which has a pretty unique pronunciation.

    • @northernswedenstories1028
      @northernswedenstories1028 Před 15 dny +1

      I always got the pronunciation wrong of that word growing up for some reason. I would always say "husq-varna" instead of "hus-kvarna" 😅. And I still don't know how to pronounce Kristianstad apparently...

  • @lucas8089
    @lucas8089 Před měsícem +2

    Okay, so this should definitely be done without them hearing what the other people say before them. So record them saying it, and then let them hear it together in the setting they are in in the video.

  • @MissAvantasiaVOD
    @MissAvantasiaVOD Před měsícem +1

    I feel under represented as a person from Skåne. (Southern sweden). Cause we do not pronounce any of these words like the swedish girl in the clip. We actually pronounce a lot like the germans☺️

    • @Lee-Eunji95
      @Lee-Eunji95 Před měsícem +1

      Ikr, I don't pronounce anything she said the same way 🥲
      Skåningar are truly under represented online about the Swedish language rip

    • @magnum_cx8805
      @magnum_cx8805 Před měsícem +3

      Well yeah because you guys are the outliers
      -med kärlek från en upplänning bosatt i Skåne

    • @Wiley97
      @Wiley97 Před měsícem +1

      Of course they take someone from stockholm, this is very logical.
      When looking at different languages you always take the dialect from the capital.

    • @Wiley97
      @Wiley97 Před měsícem

      @@Lee-Eunji95 Except SVT, you guys are everywhere there.

  • @niklasriva7053
    @niklasriva7053 Před měsícem +5

    just me who still say hennes och mauritz????

  • @7echnoid
    @7echnoid Před měsícem +3

    AstraZeneca is actually a UK company. Astra was Swedish and Zeneca from the UK, but after the merger the company remained UK based.

    • @magnusnilsson9792
      @magnusnilsson9792 Před 25 dny

      Astra is also the latin word for Star, so it's not even remotely Swedish.

    • @gonace
      @gonace Před 18 dny

      AstraZeneca is neither a Swedish nor a British company but a British-Swedish and was created after a merger between Swedish Astra AB and British Zeneca Group.

  • @hugothebest2625
    @hugothebest2625 Před 20 dny

    as a i swede i pronounced scania like the german one

  • @tokeri4198
    @tokeri4198 Před měsícem

    can we all appreciate that they were to afraid to put a french girl in this ... and me as a guy is still kinda falling in love with the french guy ? i mean i he can 100% come to my bbq and chat up my sister np.

  • @AndersEdgren-ev8dv
    @AndersEdgren-ev8dv Před měsícem +1

    So confused about these interactions, did the Brittish girl just repeat exactly what the Swedish girl said second before? 3:38

  • @ligi9560
    @ligi9560 Před měsícem

    H&M is short for Hennes & Mauritz so the first "Hennes" mean "hers" in swedish (it might be a name I don't know, but still hennes means hers). Mauritz is a name.

  • @yamahaevo
    @yamahaevo Před měsícem +1

    More stunned they knew so little about the brands.

    • @TwitchCronos100
      @TwitchCronos100 Před měsícem

      Knowledge isn't the main focus for most young people these days, you can't flex that on tiktok. The algorithm in the west also doesn't push knowledge and information.

  • @Dabis_adopted_daughter
    @Dabis_adopted_daughter Před měsícem

    I am from sweden(i never left it) and its not that complicated

  • @Kevvzi
    @Kevvzi Před měsícem +1

    Didnt expect the French guy so pronounce the words so similar to to Swede

  • @bequiorra
    @bequiorra Před 15 dny

    Volvo isn't Swedish anymore :( Chinese took it over! Though it's still getting manufactured in Sweden but yeah...

  • @tovep9573
    @tovep9573 Před měsícem +16

    Fun fact - a lot of Swedes actually still say "Hennes" rather than HM.

    • @rebecca.johansson
      @rebecca.johansson Před měsícem +1

      I say HM😊

    • @fressno1807
      @fressno1807 Před měsícem +1

      Hå Em!

    • @belindabackman707
      @belindabackman707 Před měsícem +4

      I've never ever heard anyone say "Hennes."

    • @hannaosterlund5974
      @hannaosterlund5974 Před měsícem +1

      Lögner alla säger hå-em, Tove

    • @Magnus_Loov
      @Magnus_Loov Před měsícem

      Yep! And some of us even pronounce the full name, "Hennes och Maurits". I think it was common in the TV-news to do so some decades ago when talking about them!

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 Před měsícem

    Scania is known in Poland.

  • @Eli_Hamato_Todoroki
    @Eli_Hamato_Todoroki Před měsícem

    Not even I know all these companies and I’m Swedish

  • @xXFr0stW0lfXx
    @xXFr0stW0lfXx Před měsícem

    Leonidas might be the best chocolate ive ever tasted in my life, props to belgium

  • @vicluar9832
    @vicluar9832 Před 17 dny

    I think it would be interesting to see how they pronounce koenigsegg

  • @Emysswedmovies
    @Emysswedmovies Před měsícem

    Astrazeneca is both swedish and british so I was surprised that the English girl didn’t seem to know it

  • @Dumber0
    @Dumber0 Před měsícem

    missed the finnish 1, would have been fun

  • @patrikhermansson4980
    @patrikhermansson4980 Před měsícem

    I thought the Polish pronouncements was most alike the swedish pronouncements in many of the brand names.

  • @Ailasor
    @Ailasor Před měsícem

    the sing songy accent comes from the pitch accent..

  • @TehSWEED
    @TehSWEED Před měsícem

    did anyone count how many times they said "like"?

  • @johnnorthtribe
    @johnnorthtribe Před měsícem +15

    Scania is like one of the biggest truck and bus manufacturer in the world. Strange that none of the others knew about it. We do "pronounce" the & in H&M but the & is "och" in swedish but have been shortened in daily speech to just being "å". So we actually say Hå å Em. The letter H blends together with &.

    • @ricmatify687
      @ricmatify687 Před měsícem +1

      Scania isn't big in the "world", but huge in europe.

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe Před měsícem +1

      @@ricmatify687 and all of them are Europeans.. so they should know if they have been out on the streets 😀

    • @SZJZ0
      @SZJZ0 Před měsícem +4

      I have never heard anyone say ”H och M” in Sweden. They say ”HM” just like the girl in the video did

    • @peixeess
      @peixeess Před měsícem +1

      I only hear people say H M too

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe Před měsícem

      @@SZJZ0 that is what I said. "H" and "&" are blended together to just sound H M.

  • @samuellichtspiel9637
    @samuellichtspiel9637 Před měsícem

    The Belgian can do "Asterix & Obelix" stuff.

  • @kallesbaksatt
    @kallesbaksatt Před měsícem

    I don't understand the fun when the brand name is in english. Spotify and Oatly has nothing Swedish in it

  • @kenninast
    @kenninast Před měsícem +1

    They test how people pronounce Swedish brands... and then they pick some brands that have an English name. =D

    • @kenninast
      @kenninast Před měsícem +1

      Why are there two French speakers? Someone from the Dutch speaking part would be more diverse.

  • @mikebrown41182
    @mikebrown41182 Před měsícem +2

    Be skåningarna uttala H&M. 🤣

    • @WertynIsSwedish
      @WertynIsSwedish Před měsícem

      jag är skåning och utalar det nästan exakt som i videon

    • @mikebrown41182
      @mikebrown41182 Před měsícem

      @@WertynIsSwedish Hehe jag har vänner från olika delar av Skåne och en från Ystad säger HÅU-EHM, så det är nog lite olika.

  • @patrickvswe
    @patrickvswe Před měsícem

    Its not been called "Hennes Mauritz" for many years, its just HM

  • @marty8895
    @marty8895 Před měsícem +8

    Isn’t Swedish a pitch-accent language like Japanese? That’s why you hear them going up and down when pronouncing words.

    • @Divig
      @Divig Před měsícem +6

      Yes it is.

    • @SZJZ0
      @SZJZ0 Před měsícem +1

      No it isnt. Dont even compare Swedish with Japanese buddy. Swedish is a strong language and is VERY different from Japanese buddy

    • @Divig
      @Divig Před měsícem +12

      Both are languages that uses pitch accent. There are several different types of pitch accents, and we do not use the exact same, but both use pitches.

    • @hellsSG
      @hellsSG Před měsícem

      Well it's a pitchy language but the only time pitch matters is when the same word means different things. I think there's a video here on youtube were someone sounds out the difference between anden=the spirit or the genie like in aladdin and anden= the duck. Funnily enough the difference in pitch can be traced back to the non specified version: Ande = (any) spirit and And = (any) duck.
      And only with vovels. Gift is both married and poison and sounds exactly the same, only context differentiates.

    • @Greksallad
      @Greksallad Před měsícem +15

      ​​@@SZJZ0Nobody said Japanese and Swedish have the same tones. But both languages do use pitch accent. Also there is no such thing as a "strong" language in linguistics, that has no meaning whatsoever.

  • @sibolt89
    @sibolt89 Před měsícem

    Sweden have three different ways to say K. hard and soft as well as they exist in sje sounds.

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 Před 15 dny

      Three? You have hard "K" before the vowels a, o, u and å, "tje-sound" before e, i, y, ä and ö.
      What is the third way in saying it?

  • @Luftbubblan
    @Luftbubblan Před 20 dny

    Så H&M är från Västerås? Då har man lärt sig något nytt :D

  • @ManuelRuiz-xi7bt
    @ManuelRuiz-xi7bt Před měsícem +2

    1:22 Galler = 'Guylian'???

    • @awmperry
      @awmperry Před měsícem

      Yeah, I think the subtitles picked the wrong brand there. Guylian make decent chocolate, but they’re not pronounced like that.

  • @mattiasrubin9738
    @mattiasrubin9738 Před měsícem

    Bästerås!

  • @kristofferlundgren9895
    @kristofferlundgren9895 Před měsícem

    Who would have known that a english name is pronounced in english. (Spotify)

  • @lemongorilla96
    @lemongorilla96 Před měsícem

    i smell a strong french accent in belgium, and i dont like it as a flemish speaker, thats not how we would say it 😂

  • @brunteniklasson
    @brunteniklasson Před měsícem

    Fun to hear the difference of pronunciation but what's the point of the annoying music in the background?? It's really disturbing.

  • @mancebo7
    @mancebo7 Před měsícem +1

    Half of the words being uttered here were "... like..." ... which means... absolutely nothing.

    • @davidbean6973
      @davidbean6973 Před měsícem +4

      It’s part of language now as a filler word. I just ignore it, it’s so ubiquitous.

    • @mancebo7
      @mancebo7 Před měsícem +1

      @@davidbean6973 I know what you mean... but I just can't bring myself to ignoring it - it's just too annoying and imature to my ears - like listening to the same children's song a hundred times in a row. Yes - it's a filler... and my brain is filled up to the brim with. I truly hate the damn word...

  • @fabricio4794
    @fabricio4794 Před měsícem

    Where is Julia Pal??

  • @CAT-EXE
    @CAT-EXE Před měsícem +1

    Why not SAAB they Made the best cars and kournisegg

    • @WertynIsSwedish
      @WertynIsSwedish Před měsícem

      i think everyone would have stroke trying to read koenigsegg

  • @livedandletdie
    @livedandletdie Před měsícem +3

    Swedish has long and short vowel distinction... something most other European languages do not. It's Icelandic, Finnish, Norwegian, Danish and Swedish that has long and short vowel distinction.
    Also among all the Scandinavian languages Swedish has the most vowels, 17 unique vowels before rounding, and with rounding there's 51 vowels, because Swedish has 2 distinct roundings of vowels compared to the usual 1 way of rounding vowels.
    And Scania isn't a Truck Company, It's the World's BEST TRUCK COMPANY. THE BIGGEST MOST POWERFUL TRUCK ENGINES IN THE WORLD. MADE FOR COMFORT AND THE WORST ROADS IN THE WORLD, which they have to be, as our government is piss poor at doing infrastructure.

    • @TheOnlyRaichuu
      @TheOnlyRaichuu Před měsícem +7

      Your text sounds like it's only the Nordic European languages with vowel distinction. To briefly add: German also has that ;)
      Words have different meanings depending on whether the vowel is pronounced short or long, there are many words like that.

    • @Ca11mero
      @Ca11mero Před měsícem +3

      Scania is the worlds best region* :^)

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 Před měsícem

    H&M = haem

  • @QuestionTheTruth
    @QuestionTheTruth Před měsícem

    AstraZenica är ett medicinbolag.

  • @hollowmade
    @hollowmade Před měsícem

    It’s a little weird picking companies with english names. Won’t exactly make the comparisons justice.

  • @woolgum
    @woolgum Před 20 dny

    Mostly English words/names though.

  • @yesyes-gq4pw
    @yesyes-gq4pw Před měsícem +1

    I’m in sweden, and i’ve grown up saying the full word for H&M which is: ”Hennes & Mauritz” and people get so confused when i say that instead of H&M

  • @robinm6100
    @robinm6100 Před 25 dny

    they why she (the swed) said astrazeneca is totally wrong sorry

  • @sadaiyandi7789
    @sadaiyandi7789 Před měsícem +1

    Tamil language India

  • @petereriksson7166
    @petereriksson7166 Před měsícem +4

    It is the young that say h m the older say Hennes och Mauritz. Hennes means hers. Mauritz is a mans name .

    • @HenrikJansson78
      @HenrikJansson78 Před měsícem +10

      And by "younger", you probably mean something like below 70. :)

  • @joechapman8208
    @joechapman8208 Před měsícem

    IKEA is one of those brands which is hard to see as just a name because the logo looks like an acronym (even though it's not). That's why the English woman was the outlier and the others, because IBM, ICI, ILM will always be pronounced with that "eye" sound rather than the "ee" of many other languages.

    • @magnusnilsson9792
      @magnusnilsson9792 Před 25 dny

      IKEA is an acronym, for: Ingvar Kamprad Elmtaryd Agunnaryd

    • @joechapman8208
      @joechapman8208 Před 25 dny

      @@magnusnilsson9792 Ahhh, thanks. Didn't realise. I thought people just reacting to the capitalisation. The English woman shouldn't feel any shame, then: every country is making a pronounceable word that's half-based on their alphabet

  • @Maggie0582
    @Maggie0582 Před měsícem

    Västerås Menitoned rahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

  • @erikpeterson778
    @erikpeterson778 Před měsícem

    Spotify and Oatly are obviously based on english. And Oatly is a Chinese company marketing itself as Swedish for some reason.

    • @hellmalm
      @hellmalm Před měsícem +1

      No that’s not true It’s a Swedish startup founded in Malmö 1994 that raised capital from Chinese AND Belgian investors before going public on Nasdaq.

    • @erikpeterson778
      @erikpeterson778 Před měsícem

      @@hellmalm Yeah how it's founded and how it is currently owned differs quite a bit. Calling it Swedish as of today is a giant stretch. The largest shareholder is the Chinese state at 45,9%.

    • @hellmalm
      @hellmalm Před měsícem +1

      @@erikpeterson778 Chinese interests own less than 50% doesn't make it Chinese. More important were the business culture comes from. Ownership is only really interesting when it's in controlling position. Oatly still have their headquarters in Malmö and a production and development center in Landskrona. But with that said I would prefer that all Chinese owner ship in many, many Swedish companies would shift to western ownership preferably European. But this influx of Chinese capital started in the 90's and held up to about 2015 with out much criticism. Because there's absolute risks with Chinese ownership. FYI most of the metros in the world is own/run by the Chinese.

    • @TwitchCronos100
      @TwitchCronos100 Před měsícem

      @@erikpeterson778 If you go by who owns the majority share or who uses a thing the most and that's the country that invented it then these kind of videos wouldn't make much sense at all.

  • @semdezeeuw1203
    @semdezeeuw1203 Před 8 dny

    The belgium girl didn't pronounced the words as belgians would. She pronounces every branch in english or french. Next time use someone from the netherlands. The belgian language is just a more F'ed up version of dutch.

  • @northernswedenstories1028

    Now make then pronounce Kristianstad...

  • @swedishgothia9784
    @swedishgothia9784 Před měsícem

    Scania is also the german name for the swedish region named Skåne.

    • @hnrccaa
      @hnrccaa Před měsícem +1

      in German it's Schonen, but sounds kinda outdated to me.. So Scania is Latin btw.

    • @swedishgothia9784
      @swedishgothia9784 Před měsícem

      @@hnrccaa yeah perhaps it's during HRE times. I can't remember where, but I think it's been mentioned as scania in present times as well. Are you certain that name isn't used still?

  • @FROMlefttoRightasdfghjkl

    Are those your Moms?

  • @3H3H3H
    @3H3H3H Před měsícem +1

    Swedish has well allophones in the vowels and consonants and little ingressive sounds in the language and a seductive atonal aspirated wheezing language that is seductive in the music, a repitlian language the video is beautiful and shows the Swedish richness and expressiveness in the world of international business and culture.
    ❤❤❤❤❤🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪

  • @Claptonfan
    @Claptonfan Před měsícem

    like, like, like, like so effing sick of this!!!

  • @mel3ina7
    @mel3ina7 Před měsícem

    Lol dem tror d låter lik och olik dem är helt ute och cyklar…

  • @lYl93
    @lYl93 Před měsícem

    Idiotiskt att ha företagsnamn som är engelska och latin i detta.

  • @Congaman41
    @Congaman41 Před měsícem

    Omg she thought Spotify is from USA. The young generation is so lost in all areas of life.

  • @63saruman
    @63saruman Před měsícem +1

    Thank God I have never bought from this brands.

    • @peixeess
      @peixeess Před měsícem +6

      Why is it thank god?

    • @tomeng9520
      @tomeng9520 Před měsícem

      🤡 go to sleep.

    • @Frassekatt
      @Frassekatt Před měsícem +2

      Låter bra det benrangel

    • @hnrccaa
      @hnrccaa Před měsícem

      Next nordic brand: trolley 😅

  • @Lee-Eunji95
    @Lee-Eunji95 Před měsícem +1

    As a swede from Skåne, the south of Sweden, I can't help but to get a bit irritated over time when this Swedish dialect keeps being like the "representation" of the Swedish language online.. 🥲
    There are literally people with this dialect and similar dialects that can't even understand what other people are saying unless it's in their dialect. And the capital of Sweden.. I've lost count of how many times I've had to change how I talk, to talk in their dialect just so they can understand what I'm saying, and I don't even have harsh accent.. haha
    A lot of people would actually have it a lot easier to learn to speak Swedish if you were to be in a different part of Sweden
    The pronunciations are very different, and kind of easier to grasp, since not a lot of people have it easy to pronounce and say different letters
    It would be better to change up the Swedish dialects, since this dialect doesn't represent the Swedish language at all
    It's always the dialect from the middle of Sweden that are similar that always seems to be the representation of Swedish..💀
    I didn't make this up btw, people have actually told me that personally
    They said that after coming to Skåne from Stockholm, they had it easier with the pronunciations haha
    I'm not hating on her or this video btw, just some thoughts that I've had for a lot of years that I haven't said out loud 😅

    • @northernswedenstories1028
      @northernswedenstories1028 Před 15 dny

      There are possibly dozens of unique accents in Sweden. It's kind of hard to represent them all. The best you could do is generalise a bit and have a "skåne" dialect, a Stockholm dialect, a Göteborg dialect, östgöta dialect, but once you get up north you have the Norrbotten dialect, Jämtland has various dialects that I know of, daaalarna of course. Yeah,.its kind of hard to represent all that