Simple Norwegian #4 - Counting & Numbers
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- Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
- This video will teach absolutely everything you will ever need to know about numbers and counting in Norwegian. Trust me.
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0:00 Intro
0:52 Norwegian Number terms
1:34 The Actual Numbers - 1 to 10
2:50 Genders and articles
3:22 11 to 20
4:24 Higher than 20
4:53 30 to 90
5:50 100
7:20 1000
7:47 10 000
8:18 100 000
8:35 1 000 000 (A million)
9:09 1 000 000 000 (A billion)
9:24 1 000 000 000 000 (A trillion)
9:52 1st, 2nd, 3rd etc
12:02 Mini-Test
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Simple Norwegian is a native Norwegian’s creation, intended to teach you Norwegian with some pretty simple and easy to follow lessons. The channel offers resources to learn vocabulary, grammar, and give an idea of what normal daily conversation might be like for Norwegians. I genuinely hope you enjoy the video series and that it helps you learn a lot.
I think you are really good at explaining. Thank you so much.
God bless you. This is exactly the kind of thing that I've been looking for. The explanations are great, the tips are excellent and the exercises are super helpful and make it real.
OMG! It's not that hard but when the mini test started, I was just "omg it's a little too fast huh?" Hahahsh and when it was 5555 or 7777, OMG! I was just a mess hahahahshh oh, and I'm sorry for my english
** You're really a good teacher!! I'm loving your videos!!
You are an amazing teacher! It´s helping me a lot, tusen takk!
tusen tusen tak
It took so long to write this all down but it was worth it
Tusen takk! God video. God bless you, and I’ve been learning Norwegian for 20+ days now. Slow, but sweet.
By the way, metric prefixes "femto" and "atto" (10^(-15) and 10^(-18)) came from these words "femten" and "atten".
That's pretty cool! Makes it much easier to remember those prefixes now :D
The reason why Norwegian does milliards and such is because they use the original numbering system. English once also used this, but it has since fallen out of use.
Most language use numbers that way, English is just the odd one out.
this is awesome, such well made videos and great structure. thank you for this!! takk for det!
What a beautiful LANGUAGE , thank you very very much , ALL the Best
Dude,you really good at this!And you English is awesome
Tusen takk fra Tyskland! 🇧🇻
The mini test is really helpful !
Tussle takk for setting up these videos in the order of complexity. You're a great teacher!
Love these videos for both me (I’d say I am at intermediate level but need a refresher) and for my husband who is an absolute beginner and the way you enunciate is very helpful. I get also confused sometimes as my norsk family speak trønder norsk.
I love your videos! You explain everything so well. I hope I can learn Norwegian soon 😅🇳🇴 Tusen Takk
Lol I did horrible when it came to the mini test. I've only been studying Norsk for a week or so and progress is really slow. I'm still practicing pronouncing the letters correctly and constantly reviewing phrases but I feel like I should already be past that. Oh well, guess it just takes time
Wow, my best invested 18 minutes of the day :D
Great vid for the basics, cheers.
Tusen takk!! Du er den beste!
Thanks. I´m learning a lot with your videos . So useful. Best wishes from Portugal.
I love the way u teach Norwegian u make it so easy to understand and speak...tank you
is zero 'null'?
Correct 👍
Ja
@@renvvy6066 Hei
Man I love this, you're so good! I'm planning to move to Norway prolly next year, and as early as know I'm studying the language. This helps me a lot!. Tusen Takk.
Love these videos, great teaching!!
Tusen takk . muchas gracias!
With you I just learn the number..tusen takk!!
Thank you! Very helpful on explaining the numbers
Tussen takk!
You make great teaching videos, thanks so much.
Your voice is absolutely wonderful! 🧡🧡🧡
I swear, you could use it as asmr
thank you i'm from ivoiry coast i follow your lesson very class and simple i hope speak like you
Tusen takk! ❄
Damn this was kinda hard after 1-10 😅😭😂
Thanks for this lession! I lived in Billingstad as a child for a little over a year and learned to count. Wondered if I'd forgotten any as hoping to go back next year. I remembered all, with the exception of 14. Ha, strange. But not bad after over 40 years :-)
I aced the counting test!! But damn that 1st 2nd 3rd thing absolutely obliterated my confidence
Tusen takk! 🙌🏻💯💕
Omg thank you so much! I am so proud of me! Because I was most of the time correct at the test! 2 mistakes or something like that 😍
I just love you voice
Tusen takk! Great videos
Ti tusen takk !!!
god dag simple norwegian !! tusen takk
Tusen takk 😘❤💞💞
Plus the visuals are perfect!
2. = "andre"? It looks like a German word for "other". Does it mean only "second" or also "other"?
It also means other 👌
It's also a common male name in America
@@lavendergilly5843 and Norway also André
@@vibekegronning6943 it kind of reminds me of some names like Cassandra and Kendra
9:35 we have the same in Czech, btw your videos are really great
Same in italian, 1 billion is 1 miliardo and 1 trillion is 1 bilione
You are the best teacher🧡 takk
My 4 year's boy love u soo much even he want to spend his time 2 hour's thats very good ur perfect teacher i wanna ask u can mack more for kids pls
Presenter, please say, "This is YOUR daily dose of Norwegian."
Awesome!
Tusen takk!
Thanks iam learning it finding it quite easy way
very interesting your video content👏👏👏
The landscape at the beginning of the video is very norwegian 💙
Thanks a lot
very god episode takk! :D
Learning. Thank you
OMG, why there's no alternate pronunciation for 6? 🙊🙊😳
Haha SEX is much easier to remember 😅
And in Swedish they write it "sex" 😉
And what is «seisen» (16) never heard of. (Norwgian)
Tusen takk
Kind of difficult, but it’s useful!
tusen takk :)
Tusen takk fra Aserbajdsjan 🇦🇿
Muchas gracias
I appreciate it.
Thanks
Heisann, whoever runs this channel! I have a question I hope you see. I am trying to learn Norwegian, and your video are a big help, but I'm having one problem: I forget everything! Nothing stays in my head, no pronunciation, no phrases, nothing! I even had to look through my notes to remember how to say Hi! So my question is this, how should I practice? Should I use flashcards or something? Tusen Takk!! :)
Edit for misspelling a word in English.. maybe I am not ready to learn another language (just kidding)
Repetition is an essential part of learning languages. Flashcards could be used for that purpose
@@SimpleNorwegian Thanks! The test at the end really helped me learn the numbers and now I remember almost all of them! I will definitely make some flashcards for other lessons!
Just use duolingo. U will repeat the words hundreds of times. They teach by the principle of "how the children learn a language", and that's by repeating the same thing over and over and over, until it gets naturally simple and "logical" to you. This channel, Simple Norwegian, helps me a lot, cause we r not kids, so it's much better (for me) when I see the structure, the "rules", and then, again: repeating, which duolingo does best! Any one can learn an extra language. If u learnt yours, u can learn as many as u put yourself into. But, keep in mind, u have to listen to the language, read it, speak it, repeat it. Otherwise it "goes to sleep", it's stored somewhere "in the back" of your brain and comes out again, when u r put among people who speak it. Im currently learning Norwegian, cause we want to go to Bergen to see as many fjords as possible, next August. But I've studied more than 15 languages by now and speak many of these fluently
@@junglegirl5174OMG thanks, this what i was thinking, like i love Duolingo, but i was felling I was missing something, but this channel help me a lot to fell more confident about my learning
His voice 💞💞💞💞💞💞💞
Just subscribed
billion, milliard, trillion in Norwegian are the same as in Brazil.
Takkkkkk!!! Nydelig!!!!
tesun takk
as a polish speaker im so happy that bilion in norsk is milliard and then billion for trillion. numbers i use only while talking about worth of huge companies. but still. my brain is so happy for being understood x
just makes sense!
I'll wait on your test until I've studied some.
Got me a notebook and I'm using Duolingo and your videos.
Hope it works.
Tried to learn french in high school and all I remember is:
Je voudrais tu dans ma lit (or derriere)
And
Je faire un promenade a pied avec la papier toilette.
Really thought when he paused before 100 it’d be “ten ten” or titi
I didn't think it would be "titi" but I was really hoping it was
@@evanz9608 😂
Actually, I use million, milliard and billion in my native language too. It is even better for me 🥰 btw space between the number we use too. Wtf it looks so similar 🙈
what is your native language?
@@jrb6085 czech, slavic language 🇨🇿
@@baru9238 that's so cool! I was thinking about learning Czech after I learn Norwegian
@@jrb6085 lol 🙈 not gonna change your mind but Czech is really like REALLY hard 🥴 anyway, gl 🍀
@@baru9238 thank you :)
17:18 SIMPLE NORWEGIAN CALLING US 'Swede'??!!😳😳🇸🇪🇳🇴
To be more accurate, "et hus" means "a house", while "ett hus" means "one house". Notice that when you put emphasis on the number of houses being 1, you need to use the word "ett" with two t's!
But to be fair, many Norwegians also get this wrong and mix up "et"/"ett".
Edit: For "en" you can also add an accent above the e ("én") to put emphasis on the number one, e.g. "én million".
Enig med deg. Etter mitt skjønn blir det feil å blande inn ubestemt artikkel i en leksjon om tallord. Selv om det sikkert vil være nyttig å gjøre "elevene" oppmerksom på at det her er snakk om to forskjellige ting. Antakelig fort gjort å bli forvirret.
Takk😊
Thank you wery much.😏😌
excellent! just a request re the timing on the test: time how long it actually takes you to say the larger numbers and set the timer appropriately. the timer is shorter than your own verbal answer in some cases ❤
Where's my bonus word?!
Bonus number
i will give it ->speed=hastghet
❤❤❤
Bra video
I really love the way you explain, it is super clear and easy to understand. I want to ask that is your dialect from Oslo or Tronheim?
I think he speaks with a trønderlag dialect (trøndersk)
Seksti sounds like a scottish man just saying sixty xD
As for me, the counting system strongly resembles the English one, and not only in terms of its vocabulary
It's common for Germanic languages. Maybe even not only Germanic.
@@watchmakerful yea, I know. But the matter was how much it's alike. And speaking of English and Norwegian, it seems the most similar from everything I've ever seen among the Germanic languages (despite the case when both of the compared languages are continental North Germanic).
The difference between the English and Norwegian billion and milliard is because both languages use different scales. In English the short scale is used, while in Norwegian, French, Spanish and some other languages the long scale is used.
In Polish we also have "bilion" as trillion and that system of counting (miliard, biliard, tryliard etc) And maybe in some countries they do the same🙃
It's the same in French!
🤩
your great love the
I think that it is pretty useful, althoguh machist.
btw in germany the "billion" is also 1 milliarde and the "trillion" is 1 billionen, same as "på norsk" :)
Takk
omg i’m here again and i’m so nostalgic
awesome, almost as simple as the german alfabet
This was an excellent introduction on Norwegian numbers.
A correction about the number 1, however:
En gutt, ei jente, et hus means *a* boy, *a* girl and *a* house respectively. If you want them to mean specifically _one_ boy, girl or house, it's:
Én gutt (note the accent)
Ei jente (ok, so there's no difference here)
Ett hus
Which means it is also _ett_ hundre, not "et" hundre. Unless you wish to number something as eg. "et hundretalls" - "about a hundred".
Many Norwegians get this wrong, too, which annoys the hell out of me.
Also, the v in "tolv" is not pronounced in standard Norwegian, but many dialects do pronounce it, and very markedly too.
As for the multiples of 10: the order is optional, but the "German" style (eg. "one and twenty") is more old-fashioned. Still the preferred method in some dialects. When it comes to the 30s, however, it is always "tretti" if thirty comes first, but always "tredve" if thirty comes second. "Tretti-to" vs. "to-og-tredve". "Førti" is often abbreviated as "førr" if it's in the second position: "Fir'-og-førr" (44).
As for large numbers (million, millard, billion, billiard, trillion, trilliard etc.), the reason why there's a discrepancy with the English is because English uses the short form of large numbers, and the European standard is the long form. By all rights, Britain should be using the long form as well, but for some reason they have adopted the American practice of using the short form.
And just because:
ruclips.net/video/WgkkdiDYGus/видео.html
Thanks for the awesome video. Do you have any tips to roll my R’s better? I find it difficult to pronounce “tretti” and “hundre”
Så bra, veldig hjelpsom! :D
Can anyone tell me is this correct? I get confused with which word to use with words like 'god' 'bra' 'du' 'deg' etcetera, only been studying for a few days :)
A couple of things worth mentioning if you don't mind,
Hundreds between one thousand one hundred and one thousand nine hundred are, more often than not, expressed solely as a number of hundreds. Tolv hundre, tretten hundre and so on.
As for years of the second millennium (except the first century, where it is forbidden) this is mandatory. Unless one skips the "hundre og" altogether and says, e.g "nitten nittini". At least when it is obvious that one is talking about a specific year.
Numbers from 21 to 100 are created like in Polish. For example 21 (dwadzieścia jeden) in Norwegian is 21 (tjue en).
Fun fact, earlier we said "en og tjue" or one and twenty, this was changed in 1956, but even young people still say numbers the old fashion way, from what I understand, the reason why we changed was the telephone, and the confusion it created to say numbers in the wrong order
😄❤❤❤