AMERICAN REACTS To I have beef with the Swedish language.

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  • čas přidán 12. 04. 2024
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    • I have beef with the S...
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    Tags
    american,swedish,swedish language,language studies

Komentáře • 7

  • @euschi3848
    @euschi3848 Před měsícem +8

    You have to watch her cooking video. As a Swede, I can tell you, her vocabulary and grammar is quite insane, and her pronunciation isn’t too bad. I had no problem understanding her. It blows my mind that she recorded that video a few weeks after this one, where she seemed to be very early on in her Swedish journey. Goes to show that you can learn a language really quickly with time and effort.
    It might be some good motivation for you if you want to follow in her footsteps… wish you the best from Sweden 🇸🇪 ❤

  • @olsa76
    @olsa76 Před měsícem +1

    Book your tickets already! June is soon.

  • @annikahallberg4453
    @annikahallberg4453 Před měsícem +1

    Some of the swedish words can mean more than one thing, and some you will not know how to pronounce if it isn’t in a meaning examples is “banan” can mean a track or the fruit depending on what you are saying before, another is “gryta” 🥘 can mean the food or the pot you’re cooking it in, so you can say jag kokar en gryta i en gryta = I’m cooking a pot in a pot if you’re translating it directly, you can also say gryta when you are going to eating it.
    We have many words that spells different but sounds the same letter j and g can sound the same but can be spelled differently, words can be spelled hjälp = help to english it sound like yelp, gjort = done = what you have done, hjort = a dear = animal, gjort and hjort sounds the same in swedish, ljus = the light or candle sounds like it spelled with a j. Another is k, kj, sk, skj, stj, ch sounds like its an s in the beginning or you say it longer in the beginning.
    It can be harder to learn swedish if you live in Sweden and speak english because everyone learn it from 3 grade in school, and people like to speak it if they know you speak english, it’s training for them if they don’t speak it every day, and they want to make it easier for you to understand.
    I’m often are at a language café one day a week and it’s easy to speak with people in english if they can that language or I switch between swedish and english when I talk.
    The swedish language is not an easy language to learn

  • @gunlindblad6816
    @gunlindblad6816 Před měsícem +4

    Haha she did not really understand that o and ö is totally different letters.

  • @itsgabeherekarlsson6341
    @itsgabeherekarlsson6341 Před měsícem +2

    kinda funny as a swed i giggle and understand everythinf u say in english.

  • @nocturne7371
    @nocturne7371 Před měsícem +2

    When pronouncing Swedish you really have to learn about hard and soft vowels, when you know them it gets easier I promise.
    Hard vowels A O U Å
    Soft vowels; E I Y Ä Ö
    If a k, sk, skj, stj, tj, sj etc comes BEFORE a soft vowel you say it as some variation of sh or sch. If its a g, gj etc it's pronounced like a j (or an English y because we have no dj sound).
    Ex SOFT kÄr (in love) becomes schär, because the soft vowel makes the sound before it soft.
    Ex HARD kOr (cows) becomes kor, becoause the hard vowel keeps the hard consonant before it.
    There are some exceptions, mostly in loan words and such, and there are also regional differences, but this knowledfe will help you 99 times of 100.