Learn the Icelandic alphabet A-Ö

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 147

  • @tosuchino6465
    @tosuchino6465 Год назад +5

    This is very helpful. Actually seeing a native speaker's mouth movement is a lot more helpful than just hearing recorded voices. Thank you!

  • @a_random_guy_V
    @a_random_guy_V 6 лет назад +119

    Please, continue doing this videos, it's hard to find things in Icelandic, thank you very much. I'm from Brazil.

    • @allsber
      @allsber  6 лет назад +14

      Hello Vinícius, there has been a death in the family that is the reason we have not posted a new video, but we are looking forward to continue with the Icelandic lessons and we will be recording new material soon. Thank you for watching! ❤

    • @a_random_guy_V
      @a_random_guy_V 6 лет назад +8

      @@allsber Oh, my condolences, it's really hard to lose someone that you love, specially from your family. This is such a good reason to stop making videos. God bless you and your family.

    • @7vitor742
      @7vitor742 4 года назад

      Brazil! ;)

    • @crescermeditando
      @crescermeditando 2 года назад

      Também quero aprender…

  • @EliDencheva-h2y
    @EliDencheva-h2y Месяц назад

    Hello from Bulgaria! It’s my dream to visit your beautiful country, which inspired me to learn the language. You have created incredibly helpful videos for beginners in Icelandic. I’m sorry for your loss of a loved one. I hope you find the strength to create more useful video lessons in the future.

  • @Unfime
    @Unfime 4 года назад +11

    it’s hard learning Icelandic when i’m Chinese but i’m completely dedicated, and this video helps quite a lot, thank you

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      Icelandic is a very easy category 1 language, as every other Germanic language, whereas Chinese languages are category 10 languages with impossible characters and tonal pronunciation, and, even though every language is going to seem hard to a beginner, Icelandic is actually very easy to learn, Norse languages being some of the easiest languages to learn that are almost as easy as English and Dutch - I am now advanced level in Icelandic and Norwegian and close to advanced level in Norse etc, and I highly recommend learning all the prettiest languages ever created Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Norwegian / Danish / Welsh / Breton / Cornish together as they are way too pretty not to know, and for resources, I recommend learning Icelandic from the yt vocab videos with 1.450 Icelandic words and hundreds and thousands of words in Icelandic and from the videos on grammar as well as song lyrics like Skáld songs and lyrics to Icelandic folk songs etc and also from G translate and Wkp and the Icelandic to English dictionary from the Net as well as the ws that has all the Icelandic declensions, plus there are some videos called Viltu Læra Íslensku? that are for upper intermediates, which are also very helpful with lots of new words!

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      I remember when I first watched this video when I started learning Icelandic, I didn’t know any of the words used as examples in the video, but now I know them all, which feels so good - learning Icelandic and Gothic and Norse is real fun, and I love learning these heavenly languages, which are very obsessive!

  • @stefs749
    @stefs749 6 лет назад +30

    Snilld - takk fyrir!
    For the icelandic beginners - these are the translations of the words used above (note: only "tálga" is a verb in this list, others - like "glott", grin, "ómur", sound - with identical words for verb and noun in english are the latter):
    áhugi - interest
    Baldur - male first name, name of a god in norse mythology
    draumur - dream
    arður - yield
    eldur - fire
    haglél - hailstorm
    furðulegt - amazing
    glott - grin
    hurð - door
    ilmur - smell/odour
    ísskápur - fridge
    jólahlaðsborð - christmas buffet
    köttur - cat
    langur - long
    myrkur - dark, darkness
    nánd - proximity
    orsök - reason/cause
    ómur - sound
    penni - pen
    ryksuga - vacuum cleaner
    sykur - sugar
    tálga - to carve
    undrandi - amazed/astonished
    úlfur - wolf, is also used as a male first name
    vörður - guard
    öxl - shoulder, armpit
    ylur - heat
    Ýmir - name of a giant in norse mythology
    þögult - silent, quiet
    æfing - exercise
    örmagna - exhausted

    • @allsber
      @allsber  6 лет назад +3

      Everything is correct exept for furðulegt, it means strange/weird :)

    • @anikagautadottir4620
      @anikagautadottir4620 4 года назад +1

      Ég tala íslensku I speak icelandic

    • @unboxinganythingchannel
      @unboxinganythingchannel 3 года назад

      Nice! Thanks fpr translating it. will keep this in mind. and the correction she made.. ❤️❤️

    • @ЭдуардГилязетдинов-т9ь
      @ЭдуардГилязетдинов-т9ь Год назад

      ​@@unboxinganythingchannel0:58

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      I remember when I first watched this video when I started learning Icelandic, I didn’t know any of the words used as examples in the video, but now I know them all, as I am advanced level in Icelandic and Norwegian and also close to advanced level in Norse etc, which feels so good - learning Icelandic and Gothic and Norse is real fun, and I love learning these heavenly languages, which are very obsessive!

  • @RoryRiggins
    @RoryRiggins 3 года назад +2

    it's great that there is another learner there and that she catches corrections! Found that really helpful

  • @jillianweiss5413
    @jillianweiss5413 Год назад +1

    His facial expressions are priceless. 😄

  • @modernvision01
    @modernvision01 2 года назад +2

    Nice to see Edward Norton is learning Icelandic :D
    Thanks for these videos! Very helpful for our trip to Iceland!

  • @GabrielGonzalez-dw2me
    @GabrielGonzalez-dw2me 6 лет назад +14

    Takk fyrir! ...I was looking online how to pronounce the Icelandic alphabet (because I 'm learning your language since a week) and then I discovered your channel. ... It's easier to understand how the Icelandic alphabet is pronounced with your video and I really liked the way you teach it. You have 1 more subscriber! ... Greetings from Mexico ... I hope more videos like these!

  • @ylchen77
    @ylchen77 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful people . Your interaction was so funny. Thank you for teaching Icelandic alphabet.

  • @TaylerAleks
    @TaylerAleks 6 месяцев назад

    You are watched not only kids! thanks for videos

  • @nandinibiswas
    @nandinibiswas 4 года назад +1

    Very nice please make videos for more sentences 🌹🌹

  • @kogeisan
    @kogeisan 3 года назад +1

    Thank you 👍 This is one of the best video to understand the pronunciation of the íslenska alphabet 👏

  • @anjafl826
    @anjafl826 Год назад

    She is so beautiful 😊

  • @yumsomeseema3210
    @yumsomeseema3210 4 года назад +5

    Tough language but this was so fun to watch! "I think" 😂😂

  • @ltdaniel
    @ltdaniel 2 года назад

    You both have a countagious smile. I've been learning all video smiling hahaha.

  • @abelardotrivinoalvarez8569
    @abelardotrivinoalvarez8569 Год назад

    Excelente chicos.
    Muy guapa la rubia.

  • @ylchen77
    @ylchen77 4 года назад +1

    I love you two. You did great job for the beginner. Thank you.

  • @markw4206
    @markw4206 11 месяцев назад

    Fun and informative.

  • @narasimhuluragiri5332
    @narasimhuluragiri5332 3 года назад

    Thank you so much sister, your teaching and explanation of pronunciation is good and mesmerising.

    • @allsber
      @allsber  3 года назад

      Thank you for your kind words 🥰

  • @frankie9373
    @frankie9373 3 года назад +1

    thanks so much for using words as examples aswell, I know "names" of letters can slightly differ from its pronunciation in an actuall word so this helps a lot

  • @DerGremlin
    @DerGremlin 3 года назад

    4:57
    that "wafff" sound so cute

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      It’s vaf with a v sound - there is no w sound in Icelandic and Norse!

  • @monicaniederstraser542
    @monicaniederstraser542 2 года назад

    Oh, I‘m from Brasil too. But I live in Germany. Thank you for your video. I’m learning islandic for a travel and maybe for a job in Iceland.

  • @bhuvaneswariharibabu5656
    @bhuvaneswariharibabu5656 2 года назад +1

    பளபளக்கும் பாவை

  • @evgeniyaviacheslavova1444
    @evgeniyaviacheslavova1444 4 года назад +5

    "I think" will be my all favourite😂

  • @levkrinitskych1
    @levkrinitskych1 2 года назад

    Very hard and complicated but thank you for deeper understanding of pronunciation

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад +1

      Icelandic is a very easy category 1 language, as every other Germanic language, and, even though every language is going to seem hard to a beginner, Icelandic is actually very easy to learn, Norse languages being some of the easiest languages to learn that are almost as easy as English and Dutch, plus Icelandic and Gothic and Norse have some of the easiest pronunciations and accents that are the easiest to imitate that are as easy as English pronunciation and the the neutral American accent and Dutch pronunciation and the Dutch accent with soft Gs and soft Rs, so I sounded native in Icelandic even when I was beginner level - I am now advanced level in Icelandic and Norwegian and close to advanced level in Norse etc, and I highly recommend learning all the prettiest languages ever created Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Norwegian / Danish / Welsh / Breton / Cornish together as they are way too pretty not to know, and for resources, I recommend learning Icelandic from the yt vocab videos with 1.450 Icelandic words and hundreds and thousands of words in Icelandic and from the videos on grammar as well as song lyrics like Skáld songs and lyrics to Icelandic folk songs etc and also from G translate and Wkp and the Icelandic to English dictionary from the Net as well as the ws that has all the Icelandic declensions, plus there are some videos called Viltu Læra Íslensku? that are for upper intermediates, which are also very helpful with lots of new words!

  • @marinakalita2556
    @marinakalita2556 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks a lot for taking time to make this video. It is incredibly helpful. You pronounce words very slowly and the articulation is very clear. Very good learning material.

  • @seoulmate1360
    @seoulmate1360 3 года назад

    please make more icelandic beginner content please

  • @ahmedhajji8752
    @ahmedhajji8752 3 года назад

    Tanke you for

  • @evamazer3409
    @evamazer3409 2 года назад +1

    Great video, thank you. 🙂
    Please do more. Where is your pupil from?

  • @justinhapp9250
    @justinhapp9250 6 лет назад +2

    Hello from the America! Your video is very helpful as I am learning Icelandic for my trip there in June 2019 to explore your beautiful country and to run the Midnight Sun Run half marathon in Reykjavík. Please do more or maybe a video about local places to see that tourists do not visit. Takk!

    • @allsber
      @allsber  6 лет назад +1

      Hello Justin! Glad to hear that you like our video :) we will be uploading more soon so stay tuned ;)

  • @j.mattlakes7792
    @j.mattlakes7792 3 года назад +1

    This is the A to Ö of Iceland, so try to sing along. This is the A to Ö of Iceland. What could possibly go wrong?

  • @jintineog3367
    @jintineog3367 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much guys! This is what I needed cause I'm learning Icelandic 😇

  • @amerar9490
    @amerar9490 4 года назад

    You guys are great please keep making videos..

  • @hunterice896
    @hunterice896 3 года назад

    Beautiful language 💖

  • @justkiddinbye
    @justkiddinbye 3 года назад

    thats a masterpiece. thank you so much :)

  • @palvik2228
    @palvik2228 Год назад

    You guys are GREAT! :))

  • @aubreymeyer6852
    @aubreymeyer6852 4 года назад +1

    This was actually super helpful. I heard that Icelandic is a rlly hard language to learn, but I rlly want to learn it. And there’s like no free apps that I can get, and it’s not like there’s any classes either. So this video was a huge help. Thx

    • @allsber
      @allsber  4 года назад

      You're welcome, I'm glad it helped you! 😊

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      Icelandic is a very easy category 1 language, as every other Germanic language - I am now advanced level in Icelandic and Norwegian and close to advanced level in Norse etc, and I highly recommend learning all the prettiest languages ever created Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Norwegian / Danish / Welsh / Breton / Cornish together as they are way too pretty not to know, and for resources, I recommend learning Icelandic from the yt vocab videos with 1.450 Icelandic words and hundreds and thousands of words in Icelandic and from the videos on grammar as well as song lyrics like Skáld songs and lyrics to Icelandic folk songs etc and also from G translate and Wkp and the Icelandic to English dictionary from the Net as well as the ws that has all the Icelandic declensions, plus there are some videos called Viltu Læra Íslensku? that are for upper intermediates, which are also very helpful with lots of new words!

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад +1

      Icelandic is a very easy category 1 language, as every other Germanic language, whereas Chinese languages are category 10 languages with impossible characters and tonal pronunciation, and, even though every language is going to seem hard to a beginner, Icelandic is actually very easy to learn, Norse languages being some of the easiest languages to learn that are almost as easy as English and Dutch - I am now advanced level in Icelandic and Norwegian and close to advanced level in Norse etc, and I highly recommend learning all the prettiest languages ever created Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Norwegian / Danish / Welsh / Breton / Cornish together as they are way too pretty not to know, and for resources, I recommend learning Icelandic from the yt vocab videos with 1.450 Icelandic words and hundreds and thousands of words in Icelandic and from the videos on grammar as well as song lyrics like Skáld songs and lyrics to Icelandic folk songs etc and also from G translate and Wkp and the Icelandic to English dictionary from the Net as well as the ws that has all the Icelandic declensions, plus there are some videos called Viltu Læra Íslensku? that are for upper intermediates, which are also very helpful with lots of new words!

  • @acleeg7524
    @acleeg7524 3 года назад

    Takk fyrir

  • @victoriageorgopoulou4292
    @victoriageorgopoulou4292 6 месяцев назад

    takk fyrir !!

  • @muftiabdulrahman3417
    @muftiabdulrahman3417 6 лет назад +1

    Ég heiti abdi
    Ég er frá somalia
    Takk🖐🖐

  • @thanosnfinity8109
    @thanosnfinity8109 5 лет назад +3

    Hey that was my first time pronuncing the alphabet. And I'm really good at it ! I really LOVE this Language, and the Icelandic people and the Country of course!! Thank you so much for this video. Now since I know I'm good at it I'm gonna start learning it for sure ! I love languages. I am Greek and I could spot some similarities at the alphabet and the pronunciation while I wasn't expecting it. I'm very excited about it !! +1 subscriber

  • @marytheairving8151
    @marytheairving8151 4 года назад

    THIS WAS AWESOME!!!!!! thank you, thank you!!!!!!!!

  • @holly4560
    @holly4560 3 года назад

    thanks for this!!!🙌🏻 lately i've been really obsessed with ísland , and this video is very useful!💞💖

  • @novepipps
    @novepipps 3 месяца назад

    Pls make more

  • @flintflaunt7274
    @flintflaunt7274 2 года назад

    Æfing this is is a good video

  • @skreppasoul9617
    @skreppasoul9617 4 года назад +4

    Dude is seconds away from an anxiety attack.. or so I think 😂 jk thanks for doing this video. Learning Icelandic is gonna be complicated.

  • @slakjankserinepipo1yearago461
    @slakjankserinepipo1yearago461 3 года назад +1

    HVAÐ HELDURÐU ALLSBER ER ÓGJÉÐ

    • @allsber
      @allsber  3 года назад

      Ég held að þú þurfir að fylgjast betur með í íslensku tímunum, gangi þér vel 🙃

  • @lordovwitchcraft1665
    @lordovwitchcraft1665 3 года назад

    Takk

  • @ashrafkhalil5805
    @ashrafkhalil5805 4 года назад

    Thanks for the helpful video :)

  • @JRskatrPvP
    @JRskatrPvP 23 дня назад

    Do most people in Iceland speak English too? We’re traveling there next month and I’m trying to learn some Icelandic but it’s so incredibly difficult 😩

  • @braidenno1010
    @braidenno1010 4 года назад

    This helped me

  • @msjm1254
    @msjm1254 3 года назад

    Wow... amazing😍 #FaroesePinoyFamily

  • @Ale3andhros
    @Ale3andhros 3 года назад +1

    OMG, He is handsome!

    • @Youlube87
      @Youlube87 3 года назад

      Is that you in the video? 🤔

    • @allsber
      @allsber  3 года назад +2

      @@Youlube87 No that is not him

    • @Ale3andhros
      @Ale3andhros 3 года назад +1

      @@Youlube87 No! 🤪

    • @Youlube87
      @Youlube87 3 года назад +1

      @@Ale3andhros Sorry! I thought it was you. You have the same eyes and hair color than her boyfriend.

    • @Ale3andhros
      @Ale3andhros 3 года назад

      @@Youlube87 Its ok friend! He is handsome!!!! Lol Thanks!!

  • @johnbeagmartin5809
    @johnbeagmartin5809 3 года назад

    I wouldn't be able to do the videos with her, without wanting to kiss the lips off her!

  • @Marx1989
    @Marx1989 2 года назад

    I have been in Iceland year ago. I love this country. Sorry, Iceland is not like another country. It is a planet :) I felt great there and I miss so much. I need to go once again. Thanks for this video. Icelandic language is really hard but this video helps a lot. The pronunciation of some of the letters is really funny. For example the pronunciation of H as /hau/ is very funny to me as a Pole, because in Polish /hau/ is the sound of barking dog :)
    But the biggest puzzle for me is the pronunciation of the letter L, I don't understand this way :) but anyway :)

  • @LisaMackey
    @LisaMackey 6 лет назад

    Takk fyrir!

  • @lalakelly3652
    @lalakelly3652 2 года назад

    💗💗💗

  • @a_random_guy_V
    @a_random_guy_V 6 лет назад +15

    What's the reason why the name of your channel means "naked"?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  6 лет назад +13

      I made this RUclips account years ago when RUclips first started and the name was meant as a joke :)

    • @orangebetsy
      @orangebetsy 4 года назад

      @@allsber hahaha

  • @Cookie-mv2hg
    @Cookie-mv2hg 5 лет назад +2

    Hey I really like your videos, can you put an English translation on each words too :?
    btw, does r in the last of the word sounds like "sh" in English? Thank you :)

    • @allsber
      @allsber  5 лет назад

      Hey! Thank you for watching our video :) Ofcourse, I can out the translations in the description box. I have heard that english speaking people hear "sh" when there is an "r" in the end of the word, but personally I don't hear it haha. You can make your own judgement by listening to the words in this video, for example "ísskápur" and "vörður".

  • @RaisOrujov
    @RaisOrujov Год назад

    👍👍👍👍

  • @ecranfortessa
    @ecranfortessa 4 года назад +1

    Poor guy XD

  • @milenayusunguaira
    @milenayusunguaira Год назад

    Buen y excelente que bonito que sumerced cómo islandeses esten haciendo este tipo de vídeo deseo aprender su idioma e irme a conocer tu pais

  • @henry-joy
    @henry-joy 5 лет назад +1

    Do you do the voices for Drops, Icelandic?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  5 лет назад

      No I do not :)

    • @henry-joy
      @henry-joy 5 лет назад

      @@allsber Ok. You sound exactly like it 😂😂

  • @rodrigoaguirre553
    @rodrigoaguirre553 3 года назад

    3: 58 jajaja

  • @DWood-vl5ek
    @DWood-vl5ek 3 года назад

    So where is the guy from? Dallas Texas?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  3 года назад

      He is from Sweden

  • @dev1543
    @dev1543 5 лет назад +1

    I can’t do it what the heck😂 I can’t roll my tongue haha

    • @allsber
      @allsber  5 лет назад

      Practice makes perfect! :)

  • @g-smith4466
    @g-smith4466 3 года назад

    This is what I came for @05:44

  • @shadowpastathetf2kidwithau706
    @shadowpastathetf2kidwithau706 2 года назад

    Me: oh god kill me

  • @croonch6538
    @croonch6538 4 года назад

    R kind of sounds like a mix between "sh" and "g" (the g sound like in mirage)
    Interesting video, I'm gonna try to learn Icelandic in a couple months :D

    • @divxxx
      @divxxx 3 года назад

      It's kind of an unvoiced rolling R. It's like R in Spanish but don't make vibrations in your throat.

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      It is not a rolled R at all, it is called a soft normal R aka a tap, and it doesn’t sound like sh or dgi at all lol, it is a normal R sound that is soft, that is, just barely touched and said fast, and some English words also have this type of R, and some Brazilian Portuguese words have it too! Germanic languages and especially Norse languages only use soft Rs, not harsh rolled Rs like Spanish which sound as an engine sound or motor sound! Icelandic and Norse have a soft normal R aka a tap, like some of the Rs used in Brazilian Portuguese and some of the Rs used in English and Dutch, and it can depend on the speaker actually, so there are some speakers that use harsh R in every language, but most speakers of Icelandic use a soft R, and I highly recommend saying the R as softly and as fast as one can, as R is one of the problematic sounds that only sound good when pronounced very softly and fast, and trying to prolong it automatically turns it into a rolled R which has the funny motor sound!

  • @ylchen77
    @ylchen77 4 года назад

    I still can't read L and LL . Would you please explain it to me ? Thank you.

    • @allsber
      @allsber  3 года назад

      L is a soft sound, while LL is more of a hard TL sound

    • @MichaelSpengler
      @MichaelSpengler 2 года назад

      @@allsber so not an "l" like in most other european languages?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  2 года назад +1

      @@MichaelSpengler The double L is usually a 'hard" TL sound (but not all the time!) But the single L is a soft sound like in many languages (for exempel in 'like')

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      L is a normal L like in most other languages, whereas LL is usually pronounced TL, so an extra T sound is included before the L sound, though in some words like héllo and in some names it is pronounced normally like a normal L without the T sound - the extra T sound is also included between the R and the N in words like skógarnir which is pronounced skougartnir, because it makes the words sound cooler, and when there is NN right after the ei / ey diphthongs, and possibly after the æ too, so, einn is pronounced eitn with a slightly nasal tn, so tn (also the tn in words like vatn) is always kinda nasalized in Icelandic and Norse and Faroese, but it’s the good type of nasal sound which sounds good as it is a closed nasal sound, not an open type of nasal sound like in French which sounds funny!

  • @dissident_media
    @dissident_media 4 года назад

    How hard must it be to have a lisp in Iceland

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      It is easy, and Spanish uses lisped Ds as well in words like nada, and English too in words like then and the and that, and Spanish from Spain has the lisped thorn sound as well - the eth sound ð is basically just a less obvious D sound which is slightly lisped as in Spanish and English, like when trying to say the D faster and in a less obvious way, whereas the thorn sound is þ is a less obvious T sound which is also slightly lisped as in the English words thinking and things and thought etc!

  • @elinandrea2
    @elinandrea2 5 лет назад +1

    He is from sweeden?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  5 лет назад +2

      Yes :)

    • @allsber
      @allsber  4 года назад +1

      Yes he is my boyfriend, we are living in Sweden

  • @heythere6398
    @heythere6398 5 лет назад

    Turn on subtitles in English you welcome

    • @allsber
      @allsber  5 лет назад

      The translation for the Icelandic words are in the description box :)

  • @galaxyhurricane1594
    @galaxyhurricane1594 4 года назад

    Ħ

  • @Eu6r6o6p
    @Eu6r6o6p 3 года назад

    É é = Haglél ?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  3 года назад +1

      I don't understand your question. We say a letter and then a word containing that letter. In the description box you will find the translation for the words. Hope that helps 😊

  • @borischerni
    @borischerni 5 лет назад

    Hello!. I have a question. What’s the difference between i and í?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  5 лет назад +2

      Hey! So, "i" is like the "i" in internet, and "í" is like the "e" in ebay. If that makes any sense 😊

    • @borischerni
      @borischerni 5 лет назад

      allsber so í sounds like Swedish i when girls pronounce it

    • @borischerni
      @borischerni 5 лет назад

      allsber í is more stressed

    • @allsber
      @allsber  5 лет назад

      Yes exacly!

    • @borischerni
      @borischerni 5 лет назад

      @@allsber for everybody here I have an example of í. In this link a girl say = vi gå på vägen. VÍ. ruclips.net/video/v9K4rCQERd8/видео.html

  • @damianow.6114
    @damianow.6114 4 года назад +1

    Is he Dutch?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  4 года назад

      He is Swedish :)

  • @mamaoma408
    @mamaoma408 4 года назад

    Hihihiihih😂😂

  • @samulaq
    @samulaq 2 года назад

    no "C"?

    • @allsber
      @allsber  2 года назад

      No we don't have "C"

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      Maybe some English loanwords may have it, but normally Norse languages use K instead of C and Q for the C sound, so cat is spellt katt / köttur / kat etc in Norse languages and in most other Germanic languages!

  • @hunterice896
    @hunterice896 3 года назад

    These guys are sitting on the bed 😂

  • @slakjankserinepipo1yearago461
    @slakjankserinepipo1yearago461 3 года назад +1

    Eewww Allsber means naket like this is how you say it ojj allsber þýðir að maður er nakin

    • @allsber
      @allsber  3 года назад

      Gaman að þú sért að læra ný orð, haltu áfram og gangi þér vel! 🙃

  • @user-hp4vg3ek2y
    @user-hp4vg3ek2y 4 года назад

    my american brain cannot comprehend how to pronounce L. :(

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 6 месяцев назад

      L is a normal L like in most other languages, whereas LL is usually pronounced TL, so an extra T sound is included before the L sound, so the word fjalla is pronounced fyatla and the word falla is pronounced fatla etc, though in some words like héllo and in some names it is pronounced normally like a normal L without the T sound - the extra T sound is also included between the R and the N in words like skógarnir which is pronounced skougartnir, because it makes the words sound cooler, and when there is NN right after the ei / ey diphthongs, and possibly after the æ too, so, einn is pronounced eitn with a slightly nasal tn, so tn (also the tn in words like vatn) is always kinda nasalized in Icelandic and Norse and Faroese, but it’s the good type of nasal sound which sounds good as it is a closed nasal sound, not an open type of nasal sound like in French which sounds funny!