Norwegian Directions
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- Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
- Finally I am back! So sorry!
Directions in norwegian! (Sorry if there's some spelling error, was in a bit of a hurry to make this for you) This is a little advanced stuff, but hopefully you will make it!
Give me responses please! :)
Where is the toilet/Restaurant/Party?
Hvor er toalettet/Restauranten/Festen?
Where is "insert store" ?
Hvor er "insert store"
I want to go to the library/Concert! (Dont want to)
Jeg vil ikke gå til biblioteket/Konserten! (vil ikke)
Where can I find "insert stuff"
Hvor kan jeg finne "insert"?
(News Papers, Soap, Soda, the movies, the gas station)
(Aviser, såpe, brus, kinoen, bensin stasjonen)
Right - Left
Høyre - Ventre
To the right/To the left
Til Høyre / til venstre
To your/my left
Til din/min venstre
RIght over here/there
Rett her/der borte!
Downstairs - Upstairs
Ned trappa - Opp Trappa
On the second/thirt/forth floor
I andre/tredje/fjerde etasje
400 meters down/up the street and to your left
400 meter ned/opp gaten og til venstre
Across the road
Over veien
Now you are suppose to know what this means:
Hvor kan jeg finne konserten? Jeg vil gå til konserten!
Over veien, 200 meter opp gaten, til venstre, opp trappa i 2 etasje!
Good luck Hey all Norwegian learners!
The language I'm teaching is not Bokmål nor Nynorsk. It's an east dialect and I don't think you will have much problem with bokmål after this. :) And everyone will understand this.
I am Norwegian, from Norway. Born and raised. I live in Oslo, with my husband and son.
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I started filming with my webcam. Then i moved on to a Flip, then a Flip Mino HD. Then followed my iPhone, and Now I have a Panasonic HC-V210 :)
I edit with Vegas Pro.
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Extra info about some of the videos is found here:
karinawinnem.co...
- This is also my norwegian blog. To get everything in one place!
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Thank you to all subscribers, you are too sweet :) seriously, i love you!
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Hei Karin!
I'm from Spain and I want to learn Norwegian. Your videos are very usefull for it!
Thank you so much for your work!!
i could listen to you speak Norwegion all day... your so beautiful
karinnnnn omg. so happy to see you!
and....i'll probably never have to speak norwegian but, i guess it's nice to learn diff languages just for the fun of it.
thanks! =D
Im from Spain and love the Norwegian lenguage ! Tusen Takk
Hey! This was a nice surprise, way to long since the last Norwegian class! And this was as god as I meant to remember it was. Good to see you Karin, hugs Bent... :)
nice of you to still be here
Awesome! Karin is back with another Norwegian lessons!
Thank you!
great video~! I love learning sentences! I would love more videos where I get to hear whole sentences... maybe you could do some "learn norwegian" videos with a friend, so we can hear more conversations?
Toronto is just a littlebit warmer than norway! We are just below 0 some days, and just above other days!
great to see you back with more of this amazing language. I think the tone of Norwegian is more difficult than the pronounciation :)
nice, hi again, its M ik. from the uk. it does seem that your words do have connections to English, you can see how English evolved its fantastic. Thank you, for what you are doing.
Jeg heter Jon. Jeg laere norsk men jeg snakker litt. I can read Norwegian ok but it's good to hear pronunciation. please do more lessons. They are appreciated. Tusen takk!
@Hibbicon
Right, because Germanic languages don't steal words from Latin languages and vice versa I.e. Such as there being many Germanic words in Spanish due to the settlement of the Visigoths during the 5th century AD, and English having many French words due to the Norman Invasion in the 11th century AD. The Norse people had made contact with many Latin speaking countries (France, Spain, Sicily, Germany during Roman and Frankish times)as well and probably brought back some of their vocabulary
Takk, very helpful. How's the weather in Norge now? Getting cold? Here in Toronto it's just a little above 0 C.
I love your VDO. best teacher .Tusen takk :)
@Crienexzy just a little tip: it's actually written "Resturanten" that means no a after "rest".. :) btw, are you actually norwegian?
@headhunter544
@headhunter544
They sound close enough to know that there is some sort of relation. Bibliotek sounds exactly the same in French as it does in Norwegian, just with a different accent; avis (opinion or a notice/announcement) is the same just without the pronunciation of the s; and etasje and étage (eh-tazh) are even closer than words from Italian, another Latin tongue. i.e. Simply Fr=Simplement It=Semplicemente. Toalette is even the French Toilette pronouncing the e at the end.
Very interesting. Thanks very much.
Yay iam glad to see you Karin i hope life is well! this video was great all though i allmost knew every word:P
I'm a big fan of your videos! You're doing a great job :)
The Norwegian accent is very difficult to learn :(
Thanks! I enjoy your video's.
sweet, welcome back! vilkomme tilbake (or so)
Wahey, I'd been waiting for some more Norwegian lessons.
Also can I ask when the suffix "et" is at the end of a word like "galleriet" or "biblioteket" is it always pronounced like EH with the t silent, I always wonder about that.
Thaaaanks.
so awesome/strange/funny how easy it is to translate things literally in to English and yet so difficult for us English speakers to pronounce. I can do it if I concentrate enough...but to say it so quickly in sentences I probably sound like I'm drowning in water
It’s very easy, Norwegian being one of the easiest languages ever, just as easy as English and Dutch, and Old Norse and Icelandic and Faroese and Danish and Swedish are also super easy to learn, but one must be used to the words and one must know all the words well, to be able to pronounce them with a Norwegian accent - the right pronunciation and accent should come naturally when one gets to a native speaker level or at least to an advanced level, especially if one learns each word with its pronunciation, and if one gets to hear each word many times over a period of time, as one must develop an automatic mode in the new language(s) first, which takes a lot of éxpòsure to the new language or languages, and listening to / watching a lot of videos spoken in Norwegian while reading the sub in Norwegian also helps a lot! By the way, here’s an important pronunciation tip for all speakers whose first language is English - to pronounce languages such as Norwegian and Swedish as well as Old Norse and Icelandic and Faroese in a natural and native way, one must relax all the muscles involved in speaking, because these five languages use a normal / relaxed type of pronunciation which does not require the muscles involved in speaking to be tensed up, unlike English / Dutch / German / Danish / French / Brazilian Portuguese, which use a non-relaxed pronunciation that requires the speaker to tense up the muscles involved in speaking! So, to be able to pronounce languages such as Norwegian naturally and natively, one must ‘forget’ about English pronunciation, so to speak, and pronounce the Norwegian words without tensing up the muscles involved in speaking, in other words, just pronouncing the Norwegian words in a normal / relaxed way, while imitating the intonation and the way of speaking of ppl speaking Norwegian, and, to pronounce languages such as Dutch or German or Danish etc naturally and natively, one must keep the muscles tensed up, just like in English, while imitating the intonation and the way of speaking of ppl that speak Dutch / German / Danish etc - it’s also very important to learn all the pronunciation rules first, and to learn all the words with their pronunciation, and to revise them many times, over a period of time, until they can all be remembered and processed automatically, as developing an automatic mode in the new language(s) is also equally important, as is relaxing or tensing up the muscles involved in speaking, depending on the language!
all the world missed you :D LOL . and thanx for the cool videos & keep it up ^^
Takk! I actually understood the Norwegian! Yay :)
Thank you for this new lesson. In the last summer me and my sons had a road trip across Norway (look my vids). Norway is so beautiful. You are livin' in the country of my dreams. People are very friendly there. In my opinion the norway language is easier to learn than the danish language. Do you agree? Mange takk. Hilsen fra Kiel. Nils and family.
you saved my life again
thanks Emma
Norwegian is somewhat like French: Etasje=Étage, bibliotek=bibliothèque, interesant, avis en Français est opinion which is what you state in a newspaper, so that kind of has a correlation as well.
You're right, and haha.. I found out a while after this I was wrong, it's actually "restauranten" :)
Hey. I like your videos very much. :) But I noticed some Norwegians pronounce the "og" as "o" or "uh" and you pronounced it as "ohk". Does it matter how you pronounce it?
Tusen Takk Frøken Karin.
very helpful i like your norwegian videos but i think if you would have done the words seperate like without the slash it would have been a little easier (for me) to recognize. but i like your videos takk! :D
haha, thanks you so much
Love you Lou
very helpful, thanks!
My translation: "Where can I find the concert ? I am going to the concert! Follow up the street for 200 meters. Upstairs second floor to the left! "
Am i right ?
bacause thats how we do it. Is written like the french (?) but we say it with a "g". Just like in the word interesting. "interesant" we say it like "interesang" :/
haha of course you do! :)
@Cubanheadbanger I agree
nice ending
Karin,
Why do you pronounce 'Restauran[t]en' at 0:22 as 'Restauran[g]en'?
great
like vakker som alltid..
Great Video :)
Lag flere - ikke gi deg nå!
Well, the numbers and counting is very different! And the pronoucniation is really hard i think! But a part from that i think its almost the same :)
YAY du er tilbake! :D
vi savnet deg!
Thanks!
That is weird :)
I have never said: "im going to the movies" when I want to go to the "cinema" ;)
black metal's great,and other types of music are cool too.its all a matter of taste ;)
@Cubanheadbanger Is it like Heavy Metal? I have to hear this
haha, where will you move? :D
haha :D thats nice :D
@Cubanheadbanger Fuck yeah :D Dimmu borgir is awesome!
@Cubanheadbanger yeah, it's awesome! :D though most of us listens to pop, hiphop and dubstep.. :( probarly about 20-30% of us listens to black metal :P I'm one of the 20-30%!
@discountinn Tip from a actual norwegian: the formal way to pronounce it is Rest(no A)uranten, but almost everyone pronounces it "Resturangen" think of it like "resturanten" is british, and "resturangen" is american!
Make a video about ''Norwegian Black Metal'', the biggest cultural export from there.
@neophytetroll yeah its the grimmest,darkest,coldest form of heavy metal.the most uncomercial music in the world.but none of that has anything to do with this cute girl
****velkommen***
Is she teaching Bokmal or Nynorsk? I guess Bokmal, but want to be sure.
bokmål :) But I must say, a lot of my videos are mostly Oslo-dialect, which is close to bokmål, but not completely written-correctly! But it will work ;)
Jeg vet ikke! :O Vi må planlegge
@HojoOSanagi
Well, no. It´s a Germanic language.
Hey Karin, I can't find your facebook group anymore?
Michel VDS Hello! I have just changed the name of it. Im sorry if this confuses you. facebook.com/NorwegianTeacher :)
Norwegian Teacher - Karin Thanks Karin! I hope to visit Norway by car this summer! Maybe we can meet. It seems the South of Norway has good scuba
diving sites! (by the way I changed my youtube accounts name for privacy)
always a silent T in all the words i could think of. But "pretty people" would pronounce the T :P
But those people we joke with :P
The "upper class" you know? :P
;) :D
I meant they pronounce it as "ooh" not "uh" :d
Hello you
can we date or something?
velkomme, otherwise good norwegian ;)
Thank you so much I got a girlfriend yay
sweet (girl) :)
Ha ok don't want to appear too refined, we're not learning Danish!
You can tell that she is Norwegian... duh xD
Anyways, I guess this is good if you want to learn specific phrases, however, maybe you should include some grammar. Stå på =)
lære Karin haggle bra
try to speak English