SWEDISH (sick language)

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Swedish is an awesome language that balances coolness and ease of learning like no other. I'd highly recommend it to beginners, and this video will go through and unpack some of the advantages and disadvantages of learning it, as well as the struggles, though there aren't many. Subscribe!
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Komentáře • 20

  • @hnguyen5656
    @hnguyen5656 Před dnem +3

    I learned Swedish as a native English speaker. Another advantage is that it enables me to understand written Norwegian and Danish, as well as most spoken Norwegian..

  • @Jomacchess
    @Jomacchess Před dnem +2

    Swedish is not only a minority language, but an official one in Finland

  • @Jomacchess
    @Jomacchess Před dnem +1

    I can confirm its very easy to learn, its the first one I learned :)

  • @wisedred
    @wisedred Před dnem +2

    I have no idea why youtube randomly recommended me this 😂but cool video
    As a french native who tried learning it on my own back in my middle school years, i'd agree it's a fun language. Though, I'd argue it's only easy if you're a native English speaker or know English as a base. So many words looked like germanised English it was very funny to me.
    I also love the "å", which to me has always sounded a lot like the "a" in Picard patois.
    Good continuation!

    • @moggadah
      @moggadah Před 18 hodinami +1

      French used to be popular with the aristocracy in Sweden sometime during the 18th and 19th century. There are some french loan words in Swedish. Examples are nivå - niveau, populär - populaire, schysst - juste, byrå - bureau, chaufför - chauffeur

    • @wisedred
      @wisedred Před 14 hodinami

      @@moggadah interesting! could it be due to bernadotte becoming king of sweden during the napoleonic era?
      the same thing happened in England after William the Conqueror who brought lots of vocabulary from normand to English, giving fancy things fancy french words

    • @moggadah
      @moggadah Před 13 hodinami

      @@wisedred it started before Bernadotte. I think they admired the French style. I think the elites in various european countries looked to France for inspiration. I think they all wanted to live like Louis XIV. Of course we're not talking regular people, they were busy making ends meet.

  • @colbat7214
    @colbat7214 Před dnem

    You're hilarious -Ganska roligt!

  • @Gubbe51
    @Gubbe51 Před 16 hodinami

    Are you participating in a contest for the greatest number of words per minute?

  • @seapot9675
    @seapot9675 Před 15 hodinami +2

    saying any given language is 'extremely easy' is stupid

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před 9 hodinami

      Especially when you only know _"some of the basics"_ and _"probably will learn Swedish some day"_ ... (5:36)

  • @matshjalmarsson3008

    No, we don't have genders, nor neuter, we have a similar thing in that things are either t or n words, so stol (chair) is stoleN (the chair), eN stol (one chair), while hus (house) is huseT (the house), eTT hus (one house), but it has nothing to do with male or female

    • @Doedling
      @Doedling Před 14 hodinami

      Swedish does have genders, even if it doesn't have male/female-gendered nouns - it's called grammatical gender, even though they're not associated with biological genders. They're called "common" and "neuter". Have a look here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_grammar - Greetings from a fellow Scandinavian :)

    • @matshjalmarsson3008
      @matshjalmarsson3008 Před 10 hodinami

      @@Doedling Fine, OK, by linguistic or grammatical definitions. But the average Svensson doesn't think of it as genders. It's nothing like in German or French where objects are female or male

    • @Doedling
      @Doedling Před 10 hodinami

      @@matshjalmarsson3008 I totally agree with you on that, but in a video describing the language, I don't think it's wrong to use the linguistic terminology. I don't know what else he should have said, aside from maybe elaborating and explaining that common is with n-endings and neuter is with t-endings. But that would have been pretty confusing if he didn't use the actual terminology first.

    • @matshjalmarsson3008
      @matshjalmarsson3008 Před 9 hodinami

      @@Doedling OK, I don't really think it would be that complicated to say something like "Swedish doesn't call objects male or female, but we have two ways, T and N words" and then perhaps a couple of examples

    • @Doedling
      @Doedling Před 9 hodinami

      @@matshjalmarsson3008 But when gender is the actual word for it, why not use that word? "T and n words" could mean all sorts of things, and "gender" and "t and n words" would be equally confusing to someone who doesn't know grammatical terms, whereas someone who does would actually know what "gender" means. After all, he's speaking to people who DON'T know Swedish and to whom "t and n words" might just as well mean "tertiary and nonary words" or some other bonkers thing. Sure, the examples afterwards would help clarify, but they might as well do that after he used the word "gender".
      Using the same term that's used for other languages means you can draw on experience from knowing about other languages, too. For example, even though it's not "he" and "she" in Swedish, it affects nouns in a similar way to what gender does in French and German, etc. - by affecting how you should conjugate associated adjectives, for example. If you just say "t and n words" you would have to explain every little aspect of the concept "gender" instead of just using that one simple word to convey all that meaning.