American should know these Swedish Brand pronunciation ! (Ikea, Sportify, Volvo)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 май 2022
  • Swedish language feels somewhat similar to English but has its attributes.
    It makes us to wanna dig more !
    What should we try next? and what combination is your fave?
    Leave your thoughts in comment !
    🇺🇸 Sky
    / sky_tyson
    🇸🇪 Oskar
    / oskar.zillen
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @suivatra123
    @suivatra123 2 года назад +2161

    As a car guy, it hurt a bit that she mixed up Volkswagen and Volvo.

    • @ralphsteinke3858
      @ralphsteinke3858 2 года назад +294

      I'm not even a car guy and it bugged me to (no pun intended)

    • @asd5139
      @asd5139 2 года назад +58

      Well thats american for you

    • @arasstudiosproduction2422
      @arasstudiosproduction2422 2 года назад +34

      @@asd5139 not necessarily, I’m American and had a do double “like did she really just messed that up?” It’s more like that’s her boo boo.

    • @baokachi9767
      @baokachi9767 2 года назад +7

      hurt? really? bahahahah

    • @suivatra123
      @suivatra123 2 года назад +18

      @@asd5139 More like that's someone who doesn't know cars especially since the Japanese, Korean, and of course US market dominates here.

  • @heddus97
    @heddus97 2 года назад +1303

    As a norwegian I really appriciate how international IKEA have become cuz that meant I could get knekkebrød and nice cheese whereever I go haha

    • @scenoxx
      @scenoxx 2 года назад +10

      Love your name!

    • @heddus97
      @heddus97 2 года назад +6

      @@scenoxx Thank you!

    • @fredhasopinions
      @fredhasopinions 2 года назад +9

      do they not have that at normal stores in other countries??

    • @heddus97
      @heddus97 2 года назад +20

      @@fredhasopinions I have found it very hard to find knekkebrød and pre-slized cheese that is not American cheese, but this is just after my own experience though! Might be different compared to the country and city you are in.

    • @person3538
      @person3538 2 года назад +5

      Haha samma

  • @henryqu19
    @henryqu19 2 года назад +1283

    I like Oskar's personality, the intro of the video already showed it all, he is very friendly and funny 🇸🇪

    • @karc9768
      @karc9768 2 года назад +42

      Majority of the Swedish populations is like him. They're a very welcoming country overall.

    • @nebraska22
      @nebraska22 2 года назад +15

      And cute

    • @REDnBLACKnRED
      @REDnBLACKnRED 2 года назад +10

      @@karc9768 Yes, they're super nice, but they don't really socialise outside their small set groups. So you don't actually get to experience their niceness.

    • @Thel_n
      @Thel_n 2 года назад +17

      @@REDnBLACKnRED As one myself, we sometimes meet Americans who are very confident and social and then we idk maybe get a little scared?
      Swedes are learned by the “Jantelagen” (law of Jante). It’s not a real law but it means “don’t think your special or better than someone else and most of all don’t take up to much space”

    • @jerryberry5480
      @jerryberry5480 2 года назад +9

      He’s kinda fine too 🥵

  • @peabody1976
    @peabody1976 2 года назад +1213

    Minecraft is Swedish. Electrolux and Husqvarna are both Swedish! So many things!
    (Linux is Finnish, but the inventor is a Swedish Finn!)

    • @PowerSpirit50
      @PowerSpirit50 2 года назад +95

      ​@@dubiousqualityvideos9346 It's one of the biggest in europe but we have a small population for the size.

    • @wembaa
      @wembaa 2 года назад +82

      For clarification Linus Torvalds is a Swedish-speaking Finn

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 2 года назад +23

      I only recently learned about Electrolux being Swedish, so now I have to only pronounce it as a Swede would. Also, TetraPak is Swedish (think juice boxes, and boxes of broths and shelf-stable milk)... also have to say it with Swedish pronunciation now. Hah!

    • @Divig
      @Divig 2 года назад +15

      It is hilarious hearing US americans trying to pronounce Husqvarna!

    • @ralfnyberg3264
      @ralfnyberg3264 2 года назад +66

      Swedish-speaking finns are still finnish rather than swedish!

  • @darklord8221
    @darklord8221 2 года назад +157

    I think we all fell in love with Oskar's personality, he's so charismatic, cute and upbeat 😊

    • @robins4209
      @robins4209 Год назад +4

      He knows the answers on how to pronounce the words.
      Yet he's humble, and dont accuse the American of being an ignorant SOB for not knowing how to pronounce it.
      Even though her pronounciation was quite good.

  • @Nubbe999
    @Nubbe999 Год назад +181

    I am 100% sure you use a Swedish discovery, product, invention or something from a Swedish brand every day. From the IKEA furniture, Astra medication, Tetra pack packaging products, SKF bearings, Saab military equipment, spotify music app, Mojang Minecraft, Dice battle field, Max martin music producer of all your favorite music. Inventions like the zipper, pacemaker, the refrigerator and discoveries like Kobalt that are in batteries and oxygen that you breed.
    The list of Swedish influences around the world is massive but mostly unknown.

    • @marcusrevfalk5529
      @marcusrevfalk5529 Год назад +29

      Honourable mention for the three-point seatbelt!

    • @michaelmikkelsen7726
      @michaelmikkelsen7726 Год назад +9

      Oxygen that you breed 😂😂😂

    • @Noiseprojekt
      @Noiseprojekt Год назад +4

      Dont forget companies as Bacho, Sandviken Coromant, Ericsson, Atlas Copco, Autoliv etc
      And inventors as Håkan Lans who invented the computer color graphics

    • @roraimma
      @roraimma Год назад +3

      Carl von Linneo, sin el, como habría sido la biología antes 😱

    • @Spoolingturbski
      @Spoolingturbski Год назад

      Yeah I was really hoping for a 240 shout out or maybe station wagon story. But she butchered it.

  • @MHBW81
    @MHBW81 2 года назад +438

    There are so many more Swedish things like the zipper, the dynamite (Alfred Nobel), SAAB, Oatly, in games We have Minecraft and a couple of more.

    • @liamskarhed6068
      @liamskarhed6068 2 года назад +20

      Oatly is Swedish!? Really! The others I knew. But I am Swedish I should know these things😂
      I buy Oatly pretty frequently as well XD

    • @MHBW81
      @MHBW81 2 года назад +31

      @@liamskarhed6068 Oatly tillverkas i Malmö

    • @ikeashark4806
      @ikeashark4806 2 года назад +8

      Paradox Interactive

    • @sigridvanosch1990
      @sigridvanosch1990 2 года назад +1

      SvenskaAeroplanAktieBolaget. whoopwhoop. Dead brand but still kinda nice cars.

    • @BilldalSWE
      @BilldalSWE 2 года назад +18

      @@sigridvanosch1990 SAAB is far from a dead brand. They make fighter jets, submarines and state of the art weapons used alla over the world.

  • @wiltzu81
    @wiltzu81 2 года назад +285

    Assa Abloy is Swedish company that was formed 1994 when Swedish company Assa and Finnish company Abloy merged together. The Finnish Company name Abloy came from words Aktiebolag Låsfabriken-Lukkotehdas Osakeyhtiö and has evolved to form short version of Abloy. Both Aktiebolag (Ab) and Osakeyhtiö (Oy) means stock company in Swedish and in Finnish. Words Låsfabriken and Lukkotehdas are Swedish and Finnish versions for lock factory represented as single L in the middle.

    • @T1hitsTheHighestNote
      @T1hitsTheHighestNote Год назад +4

      Didn't know the story behind the Abloy part, thanks for telling us!

    • @JUMALATION1
      @JUMALATION1 Год назад +6

      I was just about to comment on this, I'm happy someone already had :D

    • @The970709
      @The970709 Год назад +5

      ASSA stands for August Stenman Stenman August. The founder of ASSA.

    • @Bratfalken
      @Bratfalken Год назад +2

      My family build an swedish Älvsbyhus in 1973, it has the half circle Abloy keys, very neat!

    • @BiglerSakura
      @BiglerSakura Год назад +4

      @@The970709 looks like the Swedish like symmetrical patterns :) ASSA, ABBA, SAAB ...

  • @bastet9994
    @bastet9994 2 года назад +113

    PD, seriously? From all the Swedish names you could spell wrong you went with "SpoRtify"?!

  • @rbejder
    @rbejder 2 года назад +180

    I believe Fjällräven is actually the Swedish name for the Arctic fox.
    Also fjäll has an English counterpart in the word fell wich is the kind of mountain you find in Scandinavia and also Scotland.

    • @swedishbloke
      @swedishbloke 2 года назад +18

      I don’t believe you because of your username

    • @rbejder
      @rbejder 2 года назад +14

      @@swedishbloke good point 🤣

    • @maartinaal6930
      @maartinaal6930 Год назад +2

      That is not true it’s mountain fox in English ☺️🇸🇪 arctic in Swedish is antarktisk ☺️

    • @swedishbloke
      @swedishbloke Год назад +17

      @@maartinaal6930 No its arktisk…

    • @SaraW013
      @SaraW013 Год назад +21

      @@maartinaal6930 "fjällräv" literally means "arctic fox". It's even on Fjällräven's website.

  • @brucenatelee
    @brucenatelee 2 года назад +230

    I like how World Friends is actually about people from around the world. Need different countries with their own version, like World Friends International.

    • @brucenatelee
      @brucenatelee 2 года назад +2

      I thought Spotify was American. That explains why Fear Factory's post-2000 albums pre-Genexus weren't available until Mechanize and Industrialist. Archetype and Transgression are still missing.

  • @lulubelle5575
    @lulubelle5575 2 года назад +29

    Anyone else realise the mistake in the corner when Spotify came up? Then misspelled it as “sportify” lmao

    • @DidrickNamtvedt
      @DidrickNamtvedt 2 года назад +3

      Spotify's lesser known sister app, letting you stream sports to your heart's content haha 😂😂

    • @frdjuh
      @frdjuh 2 года назад +5

      It's spelled also wrong in the title 😅

    • @flowerdolphin5648
      @flowerdolphin5648 2 года назад +1

      It's not the first time that words are misspelled on this channel. It's often quite noticable lol

  • @netehangel9365
    @netehangel9365 2 года назад +76

    it bugs me talked about fjällräven as the backpack brand, because its really not just a backpack brand at all, even though kånken is so iconic as it is..
    (im probably just iritated because im not a fan of their backpacks, but generally really like their clothes)

    • @fredhasopinions
      @fredhasopinions 2 года назад +1

      ikr! their hat and jacket are some of the best i own (but pricey ow)

    • @alfaDude156
      @alfaDude156 Год назад

      The thing is, Kånken sucks. It sucked in the 70's and it sucked on relaunch. They made it slightly better by adding removable padding to the sholder straps. But when full, those straps used to hurt my itty-bitty shoulder as a kid.
      Love the trousers though, which is why I wear them almost dayly.

    • @AnniCarlsson
      @AnniCarlsson Год назад +1

      Yeah. Backpacks the smallest part I would say. It's a outdoor hiking brand

  • @awang_ir
    @awang_ir 2 года назад +207

    The most well-known swedish brand in Indonesia or any other southeast Asia countries is arguably Electrolux. Too bad it didn't get mentioned in the video. Great content, anyway

    • @firdaus99031
      @firdaus99031 2 года назад +4

      It used to be electrolux, now it's ikea, everywhere

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 2 года назад +2

      What is Electrolux? I’ve never heard of it before. Is it like a technology company?

    • @awang_ir
      @awang_ir 2 года назад +23

      @@rachelcookie321 washing machine, refrigerator, kitchen set, etc

    • @edonveil9887
      @edonveil9887 2 года назад +1

      Nothing sux like...

    • @maxenpaxen
      @maxenpaxen Год назад

      I live in Sweden and i have like never heard of that instead we have MediaMarkt and Elgiganten

  • @GratDuForloradeArgumentet
    @GratDuForloradeArgumentet Год назад +34

    Swedish brands and things among others: Spotify, Volvo, Saab, Ikea, H&M, Skype, Koenigsegg, Absolut Vodka, Acne, Fjällräven, Ericsson, Electrolux, Essity, The Pirate Bay, Minecraft, DICE (Battlefield), Valheim, Morakniv, Gränsfors, Hasselblad, and obviously artists like Avicii, Sabaton, Inflames, Swedish House Mafia .. and so on.. then there a lot of Swedish inventions like Dynamite, pacemaker, modern refrigiator, the wrench, the zipper, bolt cutter, propeller, styrofoam, tetrapak, flatscreen, gps and so on...

    • @cat-myowa
      @cat-myowa Год назад

      made me realise how useless my country is 🤣🤣

    • @Henry.uwurawr
      @Henry.uwurawr 9 месяцев назад +1

      Seat belts

  • @filiphedman4392
    @filiphedman4392 2 года назад +30

    Both these people have good personalities. Very entertaining to watch.

  • @kihwa230
    @kihwa230 2 года назад +60

    Let someone try to pronounce the ikea furniture and have this Swedish guy correct them

    • @88marome
      @88marome Год назад +4

      That would be so painful

    • @AnniCarlsson
      @AnniCarlsson Год назад +1

      That would make me cry. It's hilarious allready with my bfs family saying the names and me trying to understand what they actually got🤣 they from Netherlands

  • @PannkakaMedSylt
    @PannkakaMedSylt 2 года назад +38

    ASSA makes key locks too, they'v just been pushing to market & sell digital lock systems of late.
    Lots of American homes have ASSA locks, it's just something you dont think of too often.
    Check your home key what brand it is.
    It's the biggest lock manufacturer in the world.

    • @sikrijo
      @sikrijo 2 года назад +6

      Yes. And the Abloy was originally an old Finnish lock company (originally Ab Låsfabriken-Lukkotehdas Oy, later Ab Lukko Oy now known as Abloy dating back to 1918) that Assa bought in 1994. Their patented systems were first invented in 1907.

  • @deanmcmanis9398
    @deanmcmanis9398 2 года назад +65

    Swedish design has often been trend setting. And it was interesting to learn about the nationwide technology push, which explains recent Swedish tech innovators.

    • @newperspective5918
      @newperspective5918 2 года назад +3

      Another factor is how early we pushed wide-spread internet connectivity and usage. We are usually among the top in the world for percentage of population that uses the internet (currently standing at 94 %, 4th highest in the world) and I believe we have been since at least the 2000s.

    • @swedishbloke
      @swedishbloke 2 года назад +4

      Our music to… people from abroad who say they hate us in Eurovision often say it’s because we send songs that we think will win… that’s the whole point of the competition.

    • @MrZeuz666
      @MrZeuz666 Год назад

      @@swedishbloke They also say it's just radio music or copied etc. Meanwhile the ethnic folk songs copy themselves for thousands of years but right now it's "totally original" because what they usually hear on the radio for the past 30 years is swedish written pop. And yet they still listen to it hmmmmmmmmmmm. Also the music from Mello/ESC isn't actually as fit for radio as they think anyway.

  • @thespankmyfrank
    @thespankmyfrank 2 года назад +149

    I love these two together! They have great energy and Sky is great at pronouncing the Swedish stuff! Well done. :)
    Also, I was kinda thrown off by Assa Abloy coming up at the end haha, I didn't think it was that well known. I know it pretty well since my dad is a locksmith so I do know the origin of the name though! The Assa part comes from the capital letters of the founder's name (much like Ikea comes from the founder's name and hometown), and the Abloy part is basically a mix of the Swedish (AB) and Finnish (OY) ways of saying "corp", as in a company name (for example, H&M's proper name is H&M Hennes & Mauritz AB). So it's not really a Swedish word, it's just sort of made up and therefore the English and Swedish pronounciations are pretty much the same.

    • @oh2mp
      @oh2mp 2 года назад +8

      Yes, Swedish Assa and Finnish Abloy joined together in 1994. The original company name for Abloy was "Ab Låsfabriken-Lukkotehdas Oy" that is literally "Lock factory Ltd." first in Swedish and then in Finnish. Abloy was originally founded in 1918.

    • @lillachrissay5564
      @lillachrissay5564 Год назад

      Even more info (unnecessary) on H&M: 'Hennes' is the word for 'hers' and 'Mauritz' is a male name, so it's a reference to the fact that they sell clothes for both men an women!

    • @AnniCarlsson
      @AnniCarlsson Год назад

      Hennes and Mauritz was 2 different store. Hennes bought Mauritz and became Hennes & Maurits and later HM. But Hennes mean hers in Swedish and Mauritz is a Swedish name. The name of the starter of that company. So has everything with Sweden to do. Even the name

  • @iwavns
    @iwavns 2 года назад +15

    3:16 I think she confused Volvo with Volkswagen....😅

  • @MS00000
    @MS00000 2 года назад +44

    Abloy was originally a Finnish company. "Assa" comes from August Stenman Stenman August and "Abloy" comes from Ab Lukko Oy.

    • @potatofuryy
      @potatofuryy 2 года назад +2

      Aktiebolag lukko Osakeyhtiö, lol

    • @kimsj7305
      @kimsj7305 2 года назад +1

      AB = OY 😆

  • @Nikki7B
    @Nikki7B 2 года назад +16

    I'm not sure if it the same in the states, but in Canada we call it punch buggy, and it refers to VW beetles. I think she may have been confused between VW and Volvo.

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo 2 года назад +2

      I think she was maybe confused. All the way.

    • @demondfoxbox
      @demondfoxbox 2 года назад +1

      In Swedish thay are called: Bubbla. I Think it's the car you're looking for.

  • @truenorth365
    @truenorth365 2 года назад +12

    This one was fun too watch! Seen a bunch of americans from diffrent videos pronounce the brand "Husqvarna" (chainsaws, robot grasstrimmers etc.), and it sounds like... Husk-a-Varna. Always cracks me up.

    • @R4ts_
      @R4ts_ 2 года назад +4

      Like can‘t they read properly? Same with Fjällräven

  • @miklis203
    @miklis203 2 года назад +94

    Oh Oskar, you sweet summer child. Heres some facts:
    IKEA = Ingvar Kamprad Elmtaryd och Agunnaryd, thats the villages in Småland where he grew up.
    Volvo = Latin for "I roll" (Jag rullar). Volvo was an offshoot from SKF (Svenska Kullager förening) who made bearings and is internationally known.
    Fjällräven = Arctic fox. I love foxes and this one is a very cute, white-furred fox living above the arctic circle.
    Spotify = Why you write "spo-R-tify"?
    Acne = We only say Acne, not the studios.

    • @thebronywiking
      @thebronywiking Год назад +4

      It's Sveriges Kullagerfabrik (Sweden's ball-bearing factory). I live in Gothenburg and I was part of the choir at their 100 year jubilee, so I should know.

    • @zupergurkan
      @zupergurkan Год назад +8

      Also Assa is not only digital locks, is it? I've had many normal keys throughout my life with the word ASSA on them

    • @jvborehed
      @jvborehed Год назад +4

      @@zupergurkan Yes, "regular" locks as well.

    • @MrZeuz666
      @MrZeuz666 Год назад

      Good to point out "Fjäll doesn't mean Arctic". Even if that is the correct way to translate the name of the animal for english speakers. It's a different name for the same animal. Fjäll means (snowy) mountain like he says.

    • @footingball5566
      @footingball5566 Год назад

      @@MrZeuz666 vad är fjällen på sommaren när det inte är snö då? Fjäll har ingenting med snö att göra nödvändigtvis. Både fjällräv och arctic fox syftar på Vulpes Lagopus och är alltså exakt samma sak.

  • @Pippis78
    @Pippis78 Год назад +14

    It actually makes total sense to mix up Nordic aesthetics to Korean and Japanese aesthetics. So no shame there really. Finnish has even more surprising cultural similarity to these Asian cultures and the japanise language can look and sound similar. And Japanese people especially love Finnish stuff and wise versa.

    • @ShadowManceri
      @ShadowManceri Год назад

      Finnish people also have shared genetics with Asian countries way more than other European countries. Reason is that people from Asian countries traveled to Finland early times but didn't really go much further. Other European countries are more germanic for example. It's somewhat unique position and basically explain why Finland is similar to other Nordic countries, but has this weird twist that makes them bit different.

  • @aleshaluciano886
    @aleshaluciano886 2 года назад +35

    Love these two together. Sky does an awesome job with the pronunciation. I would have no clue how to say these properly! She makes it fun!

    • @hsmpuslinnhag4700
      @hsmpuslinnhag4700 Год назад +1

      She really butchered fjällräven tho, very American pronunciation

    • @sarahpaty6108
      @sarahpaty6108 Год назад

      That’s what I thought I really liked these two and them together

  • @satanihelvetet
    @satanihelvetet 2 года назад +12

    ASSA Abloy is a fusion of the Swedish company ASSA and the Finnish company Abloy, both very big at the European market for door locks and padlocks, especially in the nordic nations. After the fusion (1994) it has been larger at the European and international market.

  • @perer005
    @perer005 2 года назад +28

    I sometimes wonder how many people in the US know that the english language "evolved" to pronounce vowels differently than related languages in Europe, linguists call it "the Great Vowel Shift". So if you try to pronounce european words as if they were written in English then you will most likely pronounce it wrong.

    • @salsadip7453
      @salsadip7453 2 года назад +1

      the more of these videos (not only on this channel) i see, the less i expect us-americans to know about this

  • @timothychaIamet
    @timothychaIamet 2 года назад +6

    her pronounciation was amazing, i was blown away.

    • @tobias8672
      @tobias8672 2 года назад +1

      Fjällraven in particular!

  • @judna1
    @judna1 2 года назад +23

    Here in Catalonia we do the punch game with yellow cars and Minis, so a yellow Mini means a double punch.
    About Swedish bands, there's one pretty important that you didn't mention: Roxette😊🙌🏽

    • @Bratfalken
      @Bratfalken Год назад +1

      Punching friends when you meet a Volvo in Sweden would mean emergency room visits every time you hit the road! 🤣

    • @judna1
      @judna1 Год назад +1

      @@Bratfalken 🤦🏽‍♀️😅 I mean, we don't really punch each other with the game, we do a soft punch anyway...

  • @jemhams
    @jemhams 2 года назад +30

    Assa Abloy AB as a whole might be Swedish but the Abloy part of the company is still very much a Finnish lock manufacturer 🇫🇮

    • @QuesoQt
      @QuesoQt 2 года назад +4

      Muistuttaa siitä kun tajusin et Abloy nimi tulee vaa siitä et alkuperänen nimi oli Ab Låsfabriken-Lukkotehdas Oy -> Abloy ja sit se olikin Ab Abloy Oy :D

    • @missSuperknitter
      @missSuperknitter 2 года назад +1

      AktieBolag Lukko OsakeYhtiö to be precise 😊

  • @connyu6560
    @connyu6560 2 года назад +11

    The Abloy, in Assa Abloy, is from Finland (but it was sold to Assa a couple years ago). The name ”Abloy” actually mean ”Ab Lås Oy” or ”Aktiebolag Lås Osakeyhtiö” (Ab and Oy is the Swedish and Finnish shortenings for Corporation, Corp).

    • @denja964
      @denja964 Год назад +1

      Y in Finnish is pronounced like ü so this "mixed word" is really strange to me

    • @88marome
      @88marome Год назад

      It's a diphtong with vowel sounds; oo and then an ii-sound but with a round mouth, ASSA ABLOOYY.

  • @anthonybianco7511
    @anthonybianco7511 2 года назад +29

    Lol she meant the 😆 🤣 the Volkswagen for the beetle punch buggie

  • @doomera5911
    @doomera5911 2 года назад +2

    Sky has very uplifting energy,, it makes me smile

  • @sarahpaty6108
    @sarahpaty6108 Год назад

    I really enjoyed watching these two. Would love to see them both together in more videos

  • @kimsj7305
    @kimsj7305 2 года назад +7

    My dad was one of the guys that pushed the unions to help households to buy/rent their own computers. He ordered over 100 thousand Hewlett-Packard's/Compaq PC’s.

  • @tobesfb
    @tobesfb 2 года назад +18

    It does have a meaning. Assa Abloy is a fusion of two different companies; Swedish Assa (which was a spinoff from the Swedish company security company Securitas) who later merged with the Finnish(!) high security lock manufacturer ABLOY. The name ABLOY is actually an acronym. AB Lukkoset Oy, AB = Aktiebolaget (aktie = stock, bolag = company, i.e. a publicly traded company), Lukkoset (Finnish word for locks) and OY = Osakeyhtiö (same as AB but in Finnish, so Osake = stock and Yhtiö = company). You will see this naming convention for most Finnish companies as it's a bilingual country (Swedish and Finnish), so for instance you could call Nokia (which is a Finnish brand) AB Nokia OY, or OY Nokia AB, or even Nokia AB OY or Nokia OY AB.

    • @Bleckman666
      @Bleckman666 2 года назад

      I don't think ASSA could be a spinoff of Securitas, as ASSA was founded in 1881 and Securitas 50 years later in 1934..? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @aishwarya4157
    @aishwarya4157 Год назад +1

    I fell in loooveeee with Oskar!!!!

  • @MS-vo2xi
    @MS-vo2xi Год назад +2

    I really like how Sky bows with her hands placed together or in Thai it's called 'Wai'. You do it so beautifully.

  • @sushi777300
    @sushi777300 2 года назад +12

    Oskar is my new favorite 😊

  • @webearbears1675
    @webearbears1675 2 года назад +6

    Lmao she was thinking of Volkswagen 😂

  • @josedosanjos2200
    @josedosanjos2200 Год назад

    Loved this post. Thanks for sharing.

  • @joelvanhoye3622
    @joelvanhoye3622 2 года назад +4

    Assa Abloy also makes the motors and sensors for the photocell doors commonly seen in supermarkets and shops..etc. I've seen a ton of those.

  • @Mewier
    @Mewier 2 года назад +4

    The way she pronounced IKEA at 3:00 was FLAWLESS

  • @eliseivanica
    @eliseivanica 2 года назад +5

    my duolingo swedish skills def paid off when it came to pronouncing some of these correctly, especially fjällräven lmao. i'm australian and decided to learn it because why the hell not, it may be useless considering i'm literally in australia but its fun lol.

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo 2 года назад

      Do you know of that aussie guy who has a yt-channel? "Days of learning Swedish and French", something like that.

  • @romanymohareb
    @romanymohareb 2 года назад +6

    The girl is so cool and friendly
    And the guy is so cute🥲

  • @kerriganqueenofblades7128
    @kerriganqueenofblades7128 Год назад

    I love seeing these videos of people from different countries meeting, and it’s nice to be almost represented, since I’m danish lol

  • @Rana-Ehab-Mohamed
    @Rana-Ehab-Mohamed 2 года назад +7

    In Egypt we pronounce 'Spotify' just like the Swedish pronunciation
    I pronounce 'IKEA' like him, not sure if that's how also the people in my country pronounce it, because first time reading it was written in Arabic and the first Arabic letter 'إ' sounds like the English letter 'e'

  • @Jchan700
    @Jchan700 2 года назад +23

    Sky seems so genuine and open-minded!

    • @Nekotaku_TV
      @Nekotaku_TV 2 года назад +5

      She does not seem genuine.

  •  2 года назад +1

    I LOVE THEM BOTH SO MUCH

  • @cartier2312
    @cartier2312 2 года назад +5

    Hi, I’m Sweden from Oskar

  • @danielfersbeanto7942
    @danielfersbeanto7942 2 года назад +6

    What I like the most about IKEA's food ? absolutely the meatballs, here in Indonesia they actually have chicken meatballs and beef meatballs , because I dont eat beef the chicken one save me lol. The most part that i like the most is the lingonberry, is that right ?
    and for IKEA, while there furniture is somehow "pricey" lol, but the quality is absolutely worth the price. I have 2 cabinets from IKEA for more then 6 years and it is still looks like new

  • @tatianakinoshita
    @tatianakinoshita 2 года назад +7

    Very good video very funny! I love Ikea and H&M too, but both don't exist here in Brazil. So, I used to shop in these places when I lived in Portugal.

    • @shortfusedkinda
      @shortfusedkinda 2 года назад +1

      I heard ikea was going to try to expand into South America so you could be lucky

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 2 года назад

      We have H&M in my country but no IKEA sadly. They’re gonna open a store here in a couple years but it will be on the other side of the country and I would have to fly there so no IKEA for me until they come to my city.

  • @koalaskrypin
    @koalaskrypin Год назад

    Jag tycker du gjorde ett riktigt bra jobb att guida henne i uttalen Oskar!
    (translation: Oskar, I think you did a really great job guiding her thorugh the pronounciations!)

  • @solehsolehsoleh
    @solehsolehsoleh 2 года назад +2

    Here, Oskar is very charismatic, charming and likeable.

  • @jimmljammlz
    @jimmljammlz 2 года назад +7

    The Abloy part of Assa-Abloy is actually Finnish.

  • @spiele_maus
    @spiele_maus 2 года назад +12

    I was surprised that some of the brands (like H&M) were Swedish brands

    • @ankra12
      @ankra12 2 года назад +3

      Hennes&Mauritz

    • @lillachrissay5564
      @lillachrissay5564 Год назад

      Minifact about H&M: 'hennes' means 'hers' and 'Mauritz' is a male name so 'Hennes & Mauritz' really alludes to the fact that H&M sells clothes for both women and men!

  • @tntfreddan3138
    @tntfreddan3138 2 года назад

    Assa Abloy makes more than just door locks. They make loading docks for trucks at goods terminals, for example.
    Autoliv is also a Swedish company. They make safety features for most leading car brands. Autoliv, as we know it today, was founded in 1997, by merging Autoliv AB with Morton ASP. Their first factory was built in Vårgårda. The company later invented curtain side airbags, active seatbelt (automatically locks before it thinks it will crash), Night Vision in BMWs, pedestrian airbags under the hood, etc.
    The inventor for the adjustable wrench and pipe wrench was also born in Vårgårda. He founded Enköpings Mekaniska Verkstad. B.A. Hjort & Company was the distributer for the tools he made under the trademark Bahco.
    SAAB even has it's country of origin in its name: Svenska Aeroplan AB (Swedish Aeroplane AB). These madlads made the first jet fighter with a swept back wing (SAAB J29 Tunnan/Barrel aka Flygande Tunnan/Flying Barrel). Later on they decided to try their hand on car manufacturing and they were really good at it, even using the experience they had making fighter jets to make the cars. Night mode in later SAABs are actually a feature first introduced into fighter jets as to not blind the pilot and make flying at night easier. SAABs car business was then run into the ground by GM. Sadly, Konkurrensverket (Swedish Competition Authority) did not allow Christian Von Koenigsegg to buy SAABs car production.

  • @cloosat
    @cloosat Год назад

    Good chemistry with these two

  • @mkshffr4936
    @mkshffr4936 2 года назад +22

    Slug bugs were the original Volkswagen. My first car was a Volvo 122S (A.K.A. Amazon) To this day I love classic RWD Volvos (up through 240 series and maybe 740). Not a fan of the SAABs.

    • @LJBSullivan
      @LJBSullivan 2 года назад +1

      Sounds like you'd like Fredrik Bachman book A man called Ove.

    • @mkshffr4936
      @mkshffr4936 2 года назад +1

      @@LJBSullivan Well I liked Gran Torino. :D

  • @rickydimas2674
    @rickydimas2674 2 года назад +3

    Here in Indonesia, we say IKEA, Volvo and Spotify like Swedish.
    H&M eitch and em or Ha and Em cuz we pronounce H (Ha) in Indonesia

  • @christopherstreet2214
    @christopherstreet2214 5 месяцев назад

    Here for my weekly dose of Oskar 🎉he’s adorable

  • @Celtas87
    @Celtas87 Год назад

    As a swede I find this video very interesting to watch.. thank you. x

  • @emeliekarlsson1273
    @emeliekarlsson1273 2 года назад +3

    Oskar got disappointed that she only knew ikea, but the happy when he realised she goes there to eat meatballs😂

  • @-RJ-hw6qq
    @-RJ-hw6qq 2 года назад +10

    The most famous in Brazil are Volvo, Spotify and SAAB, because of the Gripen E!

    • @bobbadobidob9624
      @bobbadobidob9624 2 года назад +1

      acording to them its sportify

    • @alfaDude156
      @alfaDude156 Год назад

      Ericsson. Perhaps not any longer since there are no more Ericsson Cellphones, but they used to be pretty big in Brazil. Had a few plants in Brazil back in the day at least.

  • @jaylabreanna8025
    @jaylabreanna8025 2 года назад +1

    Another video with the lovely sky

  • @Sage.was_here
    @Sage.was_here Год назад

    I feel happy after watching this! 😍

  • @josemancunian2723
    @josemancunian2723 2 года назад +3

    Why is Oskar so cute?? Those eyes are so beautiful.

  • @thomasl2974
    @thomasl2974 2 года назад +5

    Assa Abloy is not a brand it is a company name like Meta. Brands are Assa, Abloy and many other global security brands owned by Assa Abloy. Abloy for instance stands for Aktiebolaget Låsfabriken-Lukkotehdas Osakeytiö and is orginally a Finnish company

  • @Watashi-Suki-Furazu
    @Watashi-Suki-Furazu Год назад

    Hiii i'm also from sweden and i'm also very proud of all the big companies we have made ^^

  • @Victor-gy1xe
    @Victor-gy1xe Год назад +1

    One of the most used swedish inventions world wide every day is Nils Bolins 3-point seatbelt in cars. Nils was an engineer at Volvo and made an open patent on the belt so everyone can use the design since 1959. It’s called Volvos gift to the world! They could have made BILLIONS but gave it away for free.

  • @CDCPH582
    @CDCPH582 2 года назад +4

    Isn't Ericsson (the phone company) also a Swedish brand? Swedish surnames commonly have -son (male) and -dotter (female) in the end, right?

    • @fredskronk
      @fredskronk 2 года назад

      Yea. It is. Ericsson is indeed a Swedish company.
      About the names though. Son is a very common ending in Swedish surnames. Dotter (meaning daughter) was used until the big name shift that we had a little more than hundred years ago. Nowadays it’s not or less only found in Iceland. The RUclipsr K Klein has a really good video where he talks about it.

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo 2 года назад

      Ericsson does not make phones anymore. They provide stuff that enable usage of phones. Telekom.

  • @MrBallistico
    @MrBallistico 2 года назад +10

    Where are they finding these American girls? They are all somewhat clueless, but this gal takes the cake.

    • @alistairt7544
      @alistairt7544 2 года назад +12

      Kinda entertaining pair tbh. She's very youthful and clueless, but open-minded, and he comes across as calm, collected, and intelligent. I personally like the contrast between their vibes lol

    • @JosephOccenoBFH
      @JosephOccenoBFH 2 года назад +3

      Americans living in Korea ..

    • @MrBallistico
      @MrBallistico 2 года назад +4

      I don’t want to be mean, but her pronunciation of Fjällräven was shameful. She was throwing in letters that aren’t there. Just sound the word out. Even if you don’t know how to deal with umlauts, you can get close.

    • @alistairt7544
      @alistairt7544 2 года назад

      @@MrBallistico Yeah. Especially when she mentioned on the other video that she took an interest on Swedish culture early on, at least having general an idea of the Swedish language would be given and I was assuming that wouldn't be that big of a challenge for her in guessing Swedish pronunciation. She is pretty clueless lol But that's ok! At least this is a learning situation for her...I'd hope so.

    • @rodrigoe.gordillo2617
      @rodrigoe.gordillo2617 2 года назад

      Just regular Americans

  • @Kamari_26
    @Kamari_26 2 года назад +1

    Omg, yess the game where you push eachother when we see yellow cars. I had no idea there was a a similar one but for buggy types of cars.

  • @agnieszkajarl8667
    @agnieszkajarl8667 Год назад

    Digital locks are popular in VGR in small cities or villa areas 🙂

  • @mangepange1234
    @mangepange1234 2 года назад +11

    Sky has to have some swedish genes or something cause her pronunciation was spot on

  • @KarmaKraftttt
    @KarmaKraftttt 2 года назад +8

    I use Spotify everyday all day lol and I never knew it's a Swedish brand. Haha Awesome!!! 🇸🇪💗

  • @tyrastjernfelt8082
    @tyrastjernfelt8082 Год назад

    Your way to say fjällräven is soooo funny🤣

  • @user-xo6yo8yn3b
    @user-xo6yo8yn3b 11 месяцев назад

    Assa is formed from the founder August Stenman. Abloy is a finnish company, originally called "Ab Låsfabriken-Lukkotehdas Oy", where AB means Inc (or Ltd) in Swedish and OY means the same in finnish. The double name in the middle mean "Lock factory" in first swedish, then finnish. This is common practise in Finland, literally it is "Inc Lock factory-lock factory Inc". It was then shortened to AB Lukko OY and shortened again to ABLOY.

  • @Val1414_
    @Val1414_ 2 года назад +2

    Great video. you've remind me of what someone once said❤️ "The mind is the man, the poor is in it and the rich is it too". This sentence is the secret of most successful investors. I once attended similar and ever since then i been waxing strong financially, and i most tell you the truth....

  • @thuminhle7954
    @thuminhle7954 2 года назад +3

    I speak Swedish. Guess I'm just here for Oskar haha

  • @neon-rust
    @neon-rust Год назад

    She was seriously impressive at pronouncing the names.

  • @airconditionedBreeze
    @airconditionedBreeze Год назад +1

    As a swede, I didn't know Spotify was a Swedish brand until now.

  • @lydiaschulz1439
    @lydiaschulz1439 2 года назад +7

    In German we pronounce H&M in our language, so the "m" sound is like the Swedish and "h" is like "Ha", as if you would laugh, and we speak the & as "und" or shorten it, so it becomes Ha nd Em

    • @martah5369
      @martah5369 2 года назад +1

      The reason why "&" disappears in Swedish is that "och" (and) often is abbreviated into the same sound as in the letter h. Hå-em (hō) and hå-å-em are too similar.

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo 2 года назад

      Funny M!

  • @Dragontrumpetare
    @Dragontrumpetare 2 года назад +3

    Skype was actually a collaboration between a swede, dane and an Estonian.

  • @johannabagelius4177
    @johannabagelius4177 Год назад +1

    I think nearly every household in Sweden has a fjällräven backpack.

  • @karolinDrew
    @karolinDrew Месяц назад

    Jag älskar hur hon uttalar fjällräven I love it

  • @YukanMan1017
    @YukanMan1017 2 года назад +3

    As a owner of a Volvo XC60, I listen to Spotify in my XC60 everyday! Especially during my monthly visit to IKEA 🇸🇪 🇸🇪 🇸🇪

  • @nobutheyonyou7990
    @nobutheyonyou7990 2 года назад +4

    I would like to hear him speaker swedish for more than one word, because to me his accent sounded kinda weird compared ro what i’m used to hearing. (I’m Norwegian so i’ve heard some but not a lot)

  • @freddie1723
    @freddie1723 Год назад

    I am Swedish and she spelled the brands really well

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl Год назад +1

    1:42 I must be really old school - I actually pronounce Hennes och Mauritz.
    The fun thing is it means "hers and Mauritz' "

  • @aleksalazar432
    @aleksalazar432 2 года назад +39

    Skype is not really Swedish! It was developed by one Swede (Niklas Zennström), one Dane (Janus Friis) and 4 Estonians (Ahti Heinla, Priit Kasesalu, Jaan Tallinn and I believe the fourth was Toivo Annus). Most of the development team and about 45% of Skype's employees are based in Estonia! (Estonia is a very small country that borders Russia to the East, Finland across the Gulf of Finland to the North, Sweden across the Baltic sea to the West and Latvia to the South)

    • @casper14301
      @casper14301 2 года назад +13

      You're really explaining where Estonia is. 😆

    • @mattmartin7028
      @mattmartin7028 2 года назад

      proud of our baltic sister

    • @ssmatthews6798
      @ssmatthews6798 2 года назад

      Stolen valor! The Idea of Skype was Danish where Janus Friis had already developed KaZaA. The development was primarily Estonian and Finnish. The Swedish guy was meh just paddling as a co-developper.

  • @henryqu19
    @henryqu19 2 года назад +24

    Swedish is a Germanic language like English , but it is Northern / Nordic like Danish and Norwegian , bring people from Nordic countries to the channel

    • @ThatDamnPandaKai
      @ThatDamnPandaKai 2 года назад +3

      Ironically, English should technically be Northern Germanic since it's closer linguistically than West Germanic.

    • @J.o.s.h.u.a.
      @J.o.s.h.u.a. 2 года назад +7

      @@ThatDamnPandaKai That's not how linguistics works... English is considered a Western Germanic language because its core vocabulary and origins belong to that branch. All the similarities to Northern Germanic languages are due to the influence and loanwords from Vikings who used England as their pillaging playground.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 2 года назад

      @@ThatDamnPandaKai Exactly.

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 2 года назад

      @@J.o.s.h.u.a. That's an old taxonomy that has stuck, despite proven pretty arbitrary. The original English in the 400s was also Scandinavian, whether we classify it as "west" or "north". It was proto Danes, called Angles and Jutes (after Jylland in Denmark) together with the Saxons (their immediate neigbour, long before any Germany existed) that brough the original "Anglish" language to England. Then in the 800s, an updated version of the language influenced the old, via the Danelaw in the south as well as Norwegian "Viking" settlements in the north.

    • @J.o.s.h.u.a.
      @J.o.s.h.u.a. 2 года назад +2

      @@herrbonk3635 I know this, but back when Jutes and Angles were a thing, there were no Northern Germanic languages. If we have to classify English as a Northern Germanic language just because Anglo-Saxons came from Denmark/Northern Germany, then why isn't German considered a Northern Germanic language? Genuine question.

  • @clownybrownie
    @clownybrownie Год назад +1

    I’m Swedish and I barely knew that any of these was Swedish lol

  • @Peter_1986
    @Peter_1986 Год назад

    3:00 is the best pronunciation of "IKEA" I have ever heard from a non-Swedish person.

  • @allenculpepper9553
    @allenculpepper9553 2 года назад +15

    I have most of them down, but fjällräven is pretty difficult for non-Swedes. I know some Danish and Norwegian, so I recognize that the word means “mountain fox,” but the e with umlaut throws English speakers off a bit, and I have been incorrectly pronouncing the “v” like in Danish, I think.

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 2 года назад +10

      The dots in Swedish letters aren't actually umlauts... in fact if you use that term, a lot of Swedes will look at you confused. Both ö and ä (and also å) are separate letters. They come at the end of the alphabet (so, X Y Z Å Ä Ö). I think what adds to the difficulty for English speakers in this word particularly (in addition to the fj sound) is that the ä in the first half is pronounced differently that the ä in second half. The first sounds more like the e in 'egg' and the second sounds more like the a in 'bat' (due to the first being followed by 2 consonants and the second one being followed by only 1 consonant). I taught a friend to say this word by saying it's like the word 'fell' with a y sound stuck in the middle... and then think of a Toyota RAV 4.

    • @allenculpepper9553
      @allenculpepper9553 2 года назад +2

      Thanks, Erica! That is very helpful! I knew about the extra letters since I know a little Danish, but Swedish apparently has more of them! (“A” with umlaut was just easier to explain). I didn’t know that the vowel sounded different in the second half than in the first half though, so you have definitely taught me something! For some reason, I find Swedish much more difficult than the other Scandinavian languages. I just can’t seem to get either the pronunciation or the rhythm of it right.

    • @EricaGamet
      @EricaGamet 2 года назад +1

      @@allenculpepper9553 I have learned a lot from RUclips channels like "Fun Swedish" and Peter SFI... also a little from Say It in Swedish (but not as much). Swedish might have more letters, but Danish makes up for it with its 3700 vowel sounds haha! I always called it an umlaut (I'm 1/4 German and 1/4 Swedish), but my Swedish niece always looked at me funny and then I found out that it's not an accent (diacritic) but its own letter. I find ö to be the hardest to say on its own. I can say öl, but just the letter itself is confusing. I've found that I can somewhat read Norwegian as my Swedish has gotten better. I watch a lot of Danish TV, and I can often pick out what they're saying... can definitely hear their accent and know it's Danish!

    • @drivitt
      @drivitt 2 года назад +4

      @@EricaGamet Swedish doesn't have more letters? It has the same amount as both Danish and Norwegian, it's just that Swedish has Ä Ö Å, and the other two have Æ Ø Å, but they are essentially the same, just look different.

    • @beorlingo
      @beorlingo 2 года назад +1

      @@allenculpepper9553 Danish 'v' is No different from Swedish 'v'. And ö is exactly the same vowel as Danish ø.

  • @dropzone01
    @dropzone01 2 года назад +4

    Ha ha ha, nobody corrected her that she was thinking about a VW not a Volvo 🤣

  • @frankchen3917
    @frankchen3917 2 года назад +2

    Oscar: Because it's Swedish!
    Sky: It's a Swiss brand
    😁

  • @odinfrodin2676
    @odinfrodin2676 Год назад

    Great vid as a swede it is really funny to wach! Miss spelled spotify btw!