LEARN ICELANDIC IN ONE WEEK

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024

Комментарии • 239

  • @nmphotog
    @nmphotog 4 года назад +132

    "I recorded myself speaking Icelandic and I found myself sounding like a Finnish man trying to speak Swedish." LOL we've all been that Finnish guy trying to speak Swedish at some point in life.

    • @ZetaReticuli87
      @ZetaReticuli87 3 года назад +4

      Having a finnish mother in law i get to hear this quite often. ^_^

    • @denonde1313
      @denonde1313 2 года назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @elliottp3751
    @elliottp3751 4 года назад +17

    Icelandic is a beautiful language!

  • @sakkijarvenpolkka2090
    @sakkijarvenpolkka2090 4 года назад +26

    I am also learning icelandic!
    I searched all over my city to find some kind of a guide book or a vocabulary and finally found one that has been laying there since 2008 and was the only edition available (got -45% off because of it)😂
    Greetings from Latvia 🇱🇻

  • @ewamaria8898
    @ewamaria8898 4 года назад +46

    You did great! I’m learning Swedish at the moment, but you encouraged me to take up Icelandic afterwards😉Best greetings from Poland!

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад +11

      An intense week, but I did learn quite a lot in that time.

    • @edwardamosbrandwein3583
      @edwardamosbrandwein3583 Год назад

      @@TheSwedishLad Do icelanders learn any other Nordic Language(s) Norwegian, Swedish, Danish?

  • @galgrunfeld9954
    @galgrunfeld9954 4 года назад +32

    I'd love for you to do an Old Norse learning challenge! Use the best of your Swedish-Norwegian-Danish-Icelandic skills and sound like a true viking! :D

    • @illalima6670
      @illalima6670 Год назад +1

      As an Icelander who also speaks Norwegian, Swedish and Danish, Icelandic IS old norse ;) Nice job Martin! Kveðja frá Íslandi :)

  • @SarahNorris
    @SarahNorris 4 года назад +27

    This is so cool! I wish I had the discipline to sit down and learn a language like that from scratch in just one week!! 🤯

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад +8

      "You can do it!" is the automatic response that RUclips thought I should reply with.
      Well, in this situation when you don't have a lot of distractions, it's easier to focus, but I do feel like I could have spend way more time with it. A man without a plan, but a mission, ha ha.

    • @SarahNorris
      @SarahNorris 4 года назад +2

      TheSwedishLad I feel like you can always think you could’ve done more, though. Like in exams I often think I might have done better if I spent an extra 10 minutes revising rather than watching RUclips, even if I’ve studied hard! It’s hard to know what the optimum amount is sometimes for things like this!

  • @svanhildursol6730
    @svanhildursol6730 4 года назад +11

    Wow! For one week of learning Icelandic this is like really good!! Mjög vel gert! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад +6

      Takk fyrir Svanhildur. You have a lovely name :)

  • @blomst7888
    @blomst7888 4 года назад +14

    I think learning Icelandic is a wonderful idea cause it is kind of the equivalent of Latin or Ancient Greek for the North Germanic languages such as Norwegian, Swedish, Danish and Faroese. I think learning Icelandic is not without interest for an English speaker either.

  • @Greg-mz.x
    @Greg-mz.x 4 года назад +49

    "What you see is not how you say.." :D That's Swedish too, and, I think pretty much every other language, apart from Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian :D

    • @ivomoreira42
      @ivomoreira42 4 года назад +1

      Yeah, absolutely phonetic languages. This letter/pattern of letters = this sound. No exceptions!

    • @JackHiper
      @JackHiper 4 года назад

      What do you mean? SK SKJ SJ completely look like they sound.

    • @IlFriendZonelI
      @IlFriendZonelI 4 года назад +1

      Romanian is phonetic apart from a few exceptions

    • @wardeni9603
      @wardeni9603 4 года назад +6

      Icelandic phonetics are scarily close to Finnish though. The words are for the most part different of course, but the way it sounds is close enough that as a Finn if I wasn't paying attention and someone was speaking it on the street like 20 meters away I could honestly think they're talking Finnish. :p
      I think it might be because Icelandic is closer to Old Norse than the Scandinavian languages, and Finnish has been heavily influenced by older forms of Germanic languages, including Old Norse and Old Swedish

    • @panter9282
      @panter9282 4 года назад +2

      @@ivomoreira42 These languages are Serbo-Croatian or Macedonian, Ugro-Finnic languages, Latvian, Czech, Polish and Ukrainian (some of them partially, because they e.g. have 2 letters or group of letters (i,y or h, ch) for 1 sound). And I can recommend Esperanto with only 16 rules and no exceptions.

  • @jasonknoll5170
    @jasonknoll5170 4 года назад +7

    I haven't seen this channel is who knows how long. I'm so happy to see you still making great videos, even during COVID.

  • @torrawel
    @torrawel 4 года назад +22

    Great job! Heel goed! (dutch, not that difficult ;)
    About 2 years ago (stuck at the Reykjavik airport on my way to Canada), I bought an Icelandic grammar and workbook to see if it was really that hard.
    Since I am working with the native languages of the Americas (hence my destination), I didn't think it was that difficult. Compared to other Germanic languages, sure... but compared to, let's say, Mohawk (one of my working languages, only a few thousand speakers) with its +/- 86 different personal pronoun forms
    (I, we 2 excluding you, we excluding you, we 2 including you, we including you, I versus you, we 2 versus you, we versus you, you versus me..... etc...etc... etc... ),
    it wasn't too bad at all :)
    The most difficult thing however came the next day, when I finally decided to convert the Icelandic króna price I had paid to euros!!!
    (never was a book more expensive.. :))

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад +5

      Keflavik is a nice place to be, but those Icelandic handmade socks will leave a mark in your bank account, ha ha.

  • @slonskipieron
    @slonskipieron 4 года назад +6

    An intresning challenge in language learning. Good job/Bra jobbat/Gott starf Martin :-) 👏

  • @mro1229
    @mro1229 4 года назад +30

    Þú ert að læra íslensku? Mjög gott! Ég líka.

    • @bjarnimoraa1063
      @bjarnimoraa1063 4 года назад +3

      Ég er Íslendingur
      Halló🙂

    • @mro1229
      @mro1229 4 года назад +3

      @@bjarnimoraa1063 hæ, gaman að heyra!

    • @bjarnimoraa1063
      @bjarnimoraa1063 4 года назад +1

      Takk Max:)

    • @Lindormber
      @Lindormber 4 года назад +2

      "You're learning Icelandic? Very good. I...like (it/that)?" I guess. (Swedish dude here btw)
      You can kinda figure it out as a Scandinavian.

    • @mro1229
      @mro1229 4 года назад

      @@Lindormber nästan! Ég líka betyder jag också.

  • @littlesnowy98
    @littlesnowy98 4 года назад +4

    he's got some good basics, anyone who's never experienced similar language / expressions who never be able to get this far in just 7 days

  • @MrKorton
    @MrKorton 2 года назад +4

    The "weird p" is the letter thorn: Þ/þ. We took it from the old english alphabet in medieval times.

  • @lmlag.5419
    @lmlag.5419 4 года назад +6

    I want to learn Icelandic so bad! But I Don't find so many things on the internet:(

  • @ivanlitvinov6100
    @ivanlitvinov6100 4 года назад +5

    You're amazing Martin! Thank you for such positive videos! 🙂

  • @jasonlove8733
    @jasonlove8733 4 года назад +12

    Takk fyrir og bless bless

  • @stubby4000
    @stubby4000 4 года назад +11

    It was interesting because some of the words were quite similar to english, like I could vaguely work out what they meant, e.g two brothers and little brother.

    • @Kyrelel
      @Kyrelel 3 года назад +1

      Many words in Icelandic are similar to, if not the same, as Welsh - the pronunciation is not far off either.

  • @erickhanley1571
    @erickhanley1571 4 года назад +72

    Wish I could learn Swedish in a week 😂😂😂

    • @JackHiper
      @JackHiper 4 года назад +7

      I think you could take a major step in a week. you already have english and Swedish is not that different in vocab or grammer.

    • @erickhanley1571
      @erickhanley1571 4 года назад +3

      @@JackHiper tell my Swedish gf that. I'm terrible at language other than English. I've tried numerous apps for learning Swedish... Then she constantly tells me that it's wrong 😂😂😂
      So I've given up.. Lol

    • @JackHiper
      @JackHiper 4 года назад +6

      @@erickhanley1571 Its hard to crack the code maybe of your first second language. Then the third becomes much easier. I got somewhere close to fluent in Swedish quickly after absolutely powering through German with a huge amount of effort. Swedish is easier than German but the process of learning how to learn is in my opinion the biggest part of my success. That and really wanting it. I know now in retrospect learning German was more of job or chore. I really really enjoyed learning to speak swedish. A dumb thing that also helped I think was spending 30 minutes or so at a time just listening to Swedish being spoken and not really trying to actively learn. I did this with Alex and Siggie videos on youtube that are all in Swedish. Just listening to native speakers use a language teaches you the melody or prosody of the language without you knowing that you are learning.

    • @JackHiper
      @JackHiper 4 года назад +7

      Another thing I did when learning swedish was to watch a simple movie, pick one character, and always try to say that persons lines back in Swedish while the movie is playing. Stopping the movie sometimes but normally just letting it run and actively trying to speak those lines. I always used movies I had watched several times before and enjoyed. You have a Swede to help you but maybe she just likes you the way you are and does not think you need to speak her language. For me I had a few people at my company I could ask questions on the phone sometimes for help when I got really confused.

    • @erickhanley1571
      @erickhanley1571 4 года назад +3

      @@JackHiper thanks so much for the advice. I will try again and try the listening too. Cheers

  • @arbaabsheytaan6723
    @arbaabsheytaan6723 4 года назад +11

    Mate, you're beginning to look like Tom Hanks in the film "Cast Away" 🤣 #lockdownlife 🤣

  • @ibRebecca
    @ibRebecca 4 года назад +6

    I love this, you did so well ! It's actually inspired me too. Although speaking another language to a native speaker is so scary haha

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад

      I was really self-conscious the night before, and in the beginning. Very giggly.

  • @mrskutaah
    @mrskutaah 2 года назад +1

    My grandmother was the last of the Norwegian speakers in my family when they came over to America and I wish I would've learned something from her as I want to speak in any of those languages. This gives me motivation

  • @tomasjonstefansson2287
    @tomasjonstefansson2287 3 года назад +1

    Gott kvöld means good evening, good night is goða nótt
    The thing they were saying is that if you want to say “have a good evening” to one person then you say eigðu gott kvöld, but if there are more then 2 persons you say : eigið gott kvöld
    It’s just the conjugaison of the verb

  • @ArendellianDisnerd
    @ArendellianDisnerd 4 года назад +5

    Finding a native Icelandic is kinda hard

  • @jacksonrodabaugh9984
    @jacksonrodabaugh9984 4 года назад +2

    Great video! You did great for only one week! thanks for posting!!

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад +1

      I'm quite proud of myself. I thought I would be saying What? the whole time.

    • @jacksonrodabaugh9984
      @jacksonrodabaugh9984 4 года назад

      @@TheSwedishLad haha me too😂 I've been learning swedish for almost a year, and I feel that you speak better Icelandic than my swedish😂

  • @ildebrandomoraesdesouza6558
    @ildebrandomoraesdesouza6558 4 года назад +1

    Hej, Martin! Grattis för din Islenska! I am from Brazil and the only two countries I already visit by now are Sweden (2016) and Iceland (2018). I am very in love with both countries and I am trying to learn both languages even those are so different than Portuguese. That's why I know you are doing good in Icelandic. Best regards from Brazil!

  • @bunnydelish9841
    @bunnydelish9841 4 года назад +4

    Well done! That's really impressive

  • @lpinbrez
    @lpinbrez 2 года назад

    This was awesome! Why I am just seeing it now, I have no idea. The “upside” of being at home so much more, discovering new things and challenging oneself. For example, how I found your channel to improve my Swedish. Also I have been teaching myself some crafts, such as knitting and jewellery making. Never stop learning!

  • @ajononikostudio
    @ajononikostudio 2 года назад

    I must say, I'm in a weird situation where my father is Icelandic but I don't know Icelandic. Men jag kan skriva och prata på svenska eftersom jag bodde och studerade i Österbotten i över 6 år. Just randomly stumbled upon this video, so funny that I know English and Swedish but not the language my father speaks, so I can fully relate to your outlook on the language. 😅 Hoping to someday learn Icelandic.

  • @arwenginevra9253
    @arwenginevra9253 3 года назад +1

    Du tittade på Ófærð, yaaay! Isländska låter som älviska. Du gör väldigt sympatiska videor!

  • @leonrekedal618
    @leonrekedal618 2 года назад

    Im Norwegian, This language is very closely to Norwegian and the grammar and we both use some alphabet and I love iceland

  • @Maiken2589
    @Maiken2589 4 года назад +2

    Bra jobba Martin :-D Jeg kan ikke mye islandsk, men det hørtes bra ut ;-)

  • @Idonious
    @Idonious 4 года назад +1

    I'm sure you did far better than many could with Icelandic after 7 seven days Martin! I tried learning about 5 years ago, having already learnt Swedish for 4-5 years, but it's so much different with Icelandic having cases and more emphasis on grammatical gender. I can say however, that I am working on Polish too, ever since I met my girlfriend nearly 3 years ago. After that, I think Icelandic might seem more friendly to me xD

  • @eriklares90
    @eriklares90 4 года назад +4

    I'm an American who's been trying to learn German for a few years, and have been wanting to learn Icelandic for 5 years, and finally started. Its interesting, there are weird similarities to English and German, and from what I know of Old English ( Pre Norman), there's even more similarities

    • @damonwilliams918
      @damonwilliams918 4 года назад +1

      Yea I literally just found out that English was a Germanic language after 20 years. You’d think we were more Latin huh?

    • @Schauerland
      @Schauerland 3 года назад

      Hi I’m German and English has also it’s origins from Germanic language. People came from Angeln and Sachsen and settled in England after the romans were gone. Then the Vikings came to England and also influence the language. It’s very interesting.

    • @eriklares90
      @eriklares90 3 года назад

      @@Schauerland It definitely is! My stepmother is actually from Mainz, which used to be an old Roman fort, and what I understand to her, as a result, in some parts of Germany that were under Roman Occupation, the accent developed differently as well! Something that you might find interesting is the Great Vowel Shift that occurred between 1400 and 1700, it's considered the period when English started straying from its Germanic roots, and German started forming into what is considered more modern German! (Also, as a sidenote, my last name is Latin, often associated with Spain and Latin America, but I get it from ancestors who came to the U.S. from Oppau, which is why I am so interested in Roman influence in Germany)

  • @danielhamm2984
    @danielhamm2984 2 года назад

    Icelandic online has a few classes aimed towards those living and working in Iceland(English speakers)

  • @ijansk
    @ijansk 4 года назад +9

    I'm trying to learn some German, but I haven't found a single course that is decently organised so I can make a proggression as I learn. Most of them are about basic phrases and random vocabulary. I want to speak the language; not just memorise phrases and random words that I won't be able to put into a sentence properly.
    Really frustrating.

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss 4 года назад

      I hear you.
      I don't want to learn how to order dinner or talk about luggage, I want to learn how to put sentences together once I've learned the words.
      The big thing with German is learning the noun-classes (a.k.a. "grammatical genders") and the 4 noun cases. Use Anki and put together a set of flash cards for the nouns. Learn the "gender" with the meaning of the noun.
      BTW: I think the *stupidest* thing ever is calling noun-classes, "genders," because that's *not* what they are! In fact, it's a mistranslation of the Latin grammatical term, "genus." "Genus" actually meant something more like category, group, and yes, gender. But calling the noun-categories in French, Italian, Spanish, German, Icelandic, Russian, etc. etc. … calling them "genders" implies that in German, spoons have a penis and forks have a vagina. Yes, the word for spoon (der Löffel) is in the same noun-category as the word for man, and the word for fork (die Gabel) is in the same noun-category as the word for woman. The words for man and woman have to go *someplace*, but that doesn't make them the most important words in that category. You could just add easily make German's 3 noun classes, "dog," "cat," and "horse," instead of, "masculine," "feminine," and "neuter."
      Anyway, start with nouns and their categories ("genders").

    • @jnnschnll9008
      @jnnschnll9008 3 года назад

      Have you tried watching German movies? I currently use VPN to watch shows on Netflix in my target language. Finding a tandem partner online can also be helpful.

    • @Schauerland
      @Schauerland 3 года назад

      Hey I’m German what do you want to learn :) where are you from? I’m trying to learn islandic atm

  • @peteasmr2952
    @peteasmr2952 4 года назад

    Awesome work. Tusen takk for making this, it was very interesting. stay safe.

  • @topfactswithmrlemon1048
    @topfactswithmrlemon1048 3 года назад

    Maybe I will to make youtube video about top facts about the languages BUT dont know exact. Do you have someone idea for me so dont hesistate write to me in comment!

  • @NLB90805
    @NLB90805 4 года назад +1

    I noticed from studying Icelandic that they too, much like Mexican Spanish, run words into each other and cut off phonemes when they have similar sounds.

  • @mathiasknutsson9270
    @mathiasknutsson9270 2 года назад

    Så coolt. Vad använde du dig av för att lära. Har samma känsla för språket som du. Det är svenska, norska och random alien. 😁 Så jävla bra du gjorde ifrån dig. Skitbra jobbat på sju dagar.

  • @pauljones7721
    @pauljones7721 4 года назад +1

    I have been learning Swedish for while now. I had been going to evening class but due to corona, the classes are now online.

  • @Kyrelel
    @Kyrelel 3 года назад +1

    Americans, in particular, should pay attention to this video's message.
    It is OK to make mistakes when learning something new - the only thing that matters is that you try ... and keep trying.
    [If you're about to post a Yoda-inspired response to this ... grow up ;p]
    EDIT: There is a language class near me that has a number of tables, one person sat at each table, and a flag of the country they speak the language of. You pick a table, sit down and they will introduce themselves in their own language. That's it ... the rest of the conversation is then a series of back and forth where you try to understand what they are saying, and reply or ask them a question ... but they will ONLY speak in their own language. If you cannot converse, they will begin making statements, maybe about the weather outside, through the window; about their clothing, about the table or flag, about their body (hair, eyes, etc) or your body .. and you begin to pick up small bits of conversation/vocabulary.
    The first visit is likely to cause anxiety, lol, but on subsequent visits you will begin to use the phrases they used, but use them first .. "how are you", "it's a nice day today", "i like your shirt", and you then learn what they say in response to that and to pick up on things they change ... e.g from "I am good" to "I am tired" etc.
    After a few visits you will be sitting down and having a 5-10 minute conversation with them, in their own language, without even thinking. Of course, once you start to get the hang of the language, pronunciation, etc, you can spend time at home learning new words/phrases.
    This is called "immersion learning" and it is the fastest way to learn a new language ... because you have no choice but to do so.

  • @jeffainsworth362
    @jeffainsworth362 4 года назад +2

    Wow, you learned that much Icelandic in a week, in two months it would be a second language for you.

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 10 месяцев назад

    Hey, as a polish, quite interesting challenge :)

  • @sXeScythe
    @sXeScythe 3 года назад

    Wow this is inspiring. As a native Spanish speaker I will challenge myself to learn Portuguese or Italian in one week. Thanks!!

  • @yurippp634
    @yurippp634 2 года назад

    Nice video, I'm planning on learning Icelandic too. I can understand northern Norwegian dialects that are quite similar so I probably have an advantage

  • @j.ingrid5315
    @j.ingrid5315 3 года назад

    Good job!! I wish i could Talk to a swedish native speaker like that!

  • @cesar.sandovalcolon
    @cesar.sandovalcolon 4 года назад +1

    Amazing!!!!!

  • @topfactswithmrlemon1048
    @topfactswithmrlemon1048 3 года назад

    Hebrew and Arabic has almost same content but the grammar is very different! Water in Arabic is maan and in hebrew is maim. Sun - Shams (Arabic) Shemesh (hebrew).

  • @Andrea-vf9cs
    @Andrea-vf9cs 4 года назад +1

    I applied to an icelandic course in University back in February and I still have problems even with the basic sentences 😂 by the way I saw your story on instagram and "Eg a Lif" is the reason why I decided to give icelandic a try😁

  • @ivomoreira42
    @ivomoreira42 4 года назад +9

    Wow, man, you did it and did it well. Now try !Xóõ, haha. Just kidding.
    I have to say I didn't knew that Icelandic was so close to Swedish. Comparing with Romance languages, I would say that Portuguese, Spanish and French are like Swedish, Norwegian and Danish, respectively. Icelandic is Romanian, that distant cousin with a kind of idiolect.

    • @Neophema
      @Neophema 4 года назад +1

      No way. Norwegian, Swedish and Danish are WAY closer than Portuguese, Spanish and French.

    • @ivomoreira42
      @ivomoreira42 4 года назад +4

      @@Neophema Yes, they are. But, as I said, "it's like", not "the same". So I did a comparison, not a statement. Of course the three North Germanic languages cited above are much closer than the Romance ones. As a matter of fact, for a native Portuguese speaker, Spanish is easy-peasy; for a native Spanish Speaker, a lot more troubled time understanding Portuguese. On the other hand, both of them has problems when it comes to French, just like -- as far as I know -- it's a little bit more difficult for Norwegians and Swedes to understand Danish because of the lots of vowel sounds, throaty pronunciation etc. That's what I meant...

    • @adamirfan6986
      @adamirfan6986 3 года назад

      @@ivomoreira42 finnish too..

    • @ivomoreira42
      @ivomoreira42 3 года назад +2

      @@adamirfan6986 Finnish is a totally different language, isn't it?

    • @adamirfan6986
      @adamirfan6986 3 года назад

      @@ivomoreira42 Norway, Denmark, Sweden , Icelandic and Finland are scandinavian countries...

  • @panter9282
    @panter9282 4 года назад +1

    Next challenge: Try to learn Polish in one month. There are lockers in the Malmö Central station which you can use in Polish (and also in Swedish, English, German and French).

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад

      Oh, the travel restrictions (I mean recommendations, ha ha)

  • @messerjokkel1316
    @messerjokkel1316 3 года назад

    Great video man, just started icelandic too and i feel you 😂

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 10 месяцев назад

    Martin when nervous starts singing like a swedish bird. 😅

  •  3 года назад

    Vel gert og kveðja frá Íslandi ... haltu áfram!

  • @sirsvenska5042
    @sirsvenska5042 4 года назад +1

    On saturday he straight up discovers the icelandic matrix

  • @ambiorixderbelgen2432
    @ambiorixderbelgen2432 3 года назад +1

    Well now i know there is still hope for me.

  • @MegaSaeedi
    @MegaSaeedi 4 года назад +1

    Great efforts!

  • @zitapronj6945
    @zitapronj6945 4 года назад +2

    OMG you can always play on your charms!! :D

  • @soleyalexandravalbergsdott3126
    @soleyalexandravalbergsdott3126 2 года назад

    As someone who lives in Australia, but is half Icelandic I am finding it VERY HARD to learn, but I am trying, and I will get there. Hopefully.

  • @jonnhyoliveraravenaorellan1363

    Archaic form of the West Scandinavian is the modern Icelandic! An Icelandic from Iceland knows best to get fluency in years of everyday studies.

  • @xolang
    @xolang 4 года назад +1

    jag är indonesisk. du kan lära dig språket från mig. det är mycket lätt. mycket möjligt ett av dem enklaste språken i världen. 😃

  • @LisaHerger
    @LisaHerger 2 года назад

    Did you ever continue with Icelandic? I've been learning for 3 weeks and loving it.

  • @patahel
    @patahel 3 года назад

    Impressive.
    Started learning Icelandic. There are also some similarities to (swiss)german.

  • @annavillarreal1515
    @annavillarreal1515 4 года назад

    I'm trying to learn now.

  • @hilmirorn6763
    @hilmirorn6763 2 года назад

    wow, I didn't do it in a week but I did it in 15 years, well... more like 3 years but I've been doing it since.

  • @panter9282
    @panter9282 4 года назад +2

    7:24 I finally know, why you do not pronounce the trilled Swedish R, but the Danish R.

  • @user-mrfrog
    @user-mrfrog 4 года назад +1

    Gott kvöld frá Kanada! Ég er að læra íslensku. Þú gerðir gott starf. Til hamingju!

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад +2

      Takk fyrir :)

    • @IAOIceland1984
      @IAOIceland1984 4 года назад +2

      Frekar nálægt talhætti okkar, þú vannst þetta verk vel passar samt betur en þú gerðir gott starf, bein þýðing úr "you did a good job" passar ekki alveg en þetta er samt helvíti fín þýðing annars. Tók eftir því að þú lést stórann staf í Kanada og lítinn staf í íslensku sem er hárrétt! 8.5/10

  • @kendidolly9087
    @kendidolly9087 2 года назад

    I'm impressed by how much you learned in a week

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  2 года назад

      Same here. It was an intense week, for sure.

  • @LisaHerger
    @LisaHerger 3 года назад

    This is great! It's so tantalizing how similar all the Germanic languages are. It makes me want to learn all of them at least a little.

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  3 года назад +1

      You can do it!

    • @LisaHerger
      @LisaHerger 3 года назад

      Haha! Mange tak! Jeg begynde med dansk. That'll keep me busy for a couple of years. :-) Jeg ELSKER dine videoer der sammenligner svensk og dansk!

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  3 года назад +1

      @@LisaHerger Then it's a good thing I'm from Skåne, it's like the best of both worlds :)

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  3 года назад

      @@LisaHerger aaawww

    • @jeremyh9033
      @jeremyh9033 3 года назад +1

      Haha I'm also tempted to do the same thing. Once you learn one germanic language, it helps a lot in understanding the others. I feel at the very least learning to understand the entire Nordic branch is a sort of reasonable goal. 😂 Jeg studerer norsk nå, så jeg forstår også litt dansk i skrivingen og også svensk hvis jeg prøver mye..

  • @Kjallon
    @Kjallon 3 года назад +1

    First we say (hello=hæ ) and next is (how are you =hvernig hefurðu það )next is (bye=bæ )next (stop=stoppaðu

  • @topfactswithmrlemon1048
    @topfactswithmrlemon1048 3 года назад

    Interesting why Icelandic language is going on other way away from the scandinavian languages, norwegian, danish and Swedish are most closing but Finnish is another family language.

  • @richardgardner5568
    @richardgardner5568 2 года назад

    I lived in Iceland for a couple of years before it became hip (late 90s). I worked hard on a couple of major sounds with my office translator. You got the ö way better than I can. but you aren't so good on the various "L" (and LL - includes a click out of the side of your mouth sounds). I remember one time with Icelandic friends and they said Icelandic is pronounced exactly as it is spelled and I got a good laugh exactly pronouncing Icelandic phrases exactly as they are spelled - like goðan dagin (Go' die). Hvað er Þessi (Qwa airh (even the Þessi is dropped).

  • @NWEuroLangs
    @NWEuroLangs 4 года назад +4

    Martin, if you're going to continue learning Icelandic there's one word I can help you with : já is pronounced like yow to rhyme with cow . Nei eða já was the Icelandic entry in Eurovision 1992 ruclips.net/video/ELSuY9riUUY/видео.html . Have a good day . :)

  • @MrVaarwater
    @MrVaarwater 4 года назад +2

    Try to learn and speak Dutch in a week, it's also a little bit similar to Swedish.

  • @maddcharity1721
    @maddcharity1721 Год назад

    So it’s Swedish that is similar? I’ve been studying Norwegian thinking it’s similar but I guess I’ll study both now.

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 10 месяцев назад

    Hey, it looks like a very good swedish-icelandic criminal, which is cool 😅

  • @noorulnaziha5709
    @noorulnaziha5709 4 года назад

    I'm Indian. I have no connection to the nordic region. But I wanna learn icelandic. I find it fascinating . Can I do it?

  • @einarvargtass1047
    @einarvargtass1047 4 года назад +1

    Väldigt imponerande.

  • @user-by6cd1fd8g
    @user-by6cd1fd8g Год назад

    👌 wow

  • @pandasantaplays7309
    @pandasantaplays7309 3 года назад

    Halló þú getur talað íslenku me talking icelandic

  • @marlenakocovic3720
    @marlenakocovic3720 4 года назад

    It was very challenging but u did good a good job

  • @hrefnahjaltadottir6275
    @hrefnahjaltadottir6275 3 года назад

    Hi am from Iceland

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  3 года назад +1

      Hi Hrefna. How are things with you?

  • @shamonetoting4933
    @shamonetoting4933 3 года назад

    Hæ! Also learning Íslensku... completely complicated. Good luck.

  • @SERVICERMUSIC
    @SERVICERMUSIC 3 года назад

    Já!!! Mjög gott maður!

  • @Schauerland
    @Schauerland 3 года назад

    Im german and im just learning some islandic :) there are also many words that are or sound like in German. Some words we don’t say every day and some words we only use in a “slang” way. And yea it’s very hard if the spelled word sound completely different than it’s written. That drives me insane 😂

  • @michakrzyzanowski9511
    @michakrzyzanowski9511 4 года назад +1

    10/10

  • @deanschofield9102
    @deanschofield9102 3 года назад

    Hey, great video! Very impressive!
    I want to learn Icelandic, I understand a little bit of Norwegian(bokmål).
    As a Swedish speaker, do you think I should learn more Norwegien first to help me to learn Icelandic? Or does it not help me?
    I am an English speaker

    • @jeremyh9033
      @jeremyh9033 3 года назад

      I don't have the best insight for you as I'm also an English speaker learning Norwegian, but I can say that when I've dabbled in Icelandic, my Norwegian knowledge greatly helped in understanding it. Especially if you know a bit about the various dialects spoken in Norway, and not just bokmål. Norwegian is definitely a more approachable language for English speakers than Icelandic. I kind of wonder if you weren't already learning it, if there would be anything to the strategy of choosing to learn an easier language from a family before tackling the one you really want to study, or if that just causes more confusion.

    • @jeremyh9033
      @jeremyh9033 3 года назад

      Kinda like learning the fundamentals of music on a recorder or a piano before trying to tackle getting good sound out of a bassoon.

    • @mihai-dinulazarescu9124
      @mihai-dinulazarescu9124 2 года назад +1

      It won´t help you!

  • @siggiooo5330
    @siggiooo5330 4 года назад +1

    I'm Icelandic and this is the funniest thing ever

  • @Pofikasz
    @Pofikasz 4 года назад +1

    0:11 whoohooo! Its me! :D

  • @lachlanclark9987
    @lachlanclark9987 4 года назад

    Can you make a video on how you did it? What resources did you use?

  • @ajgor215
    @ajgor215 4 года назад

    In game called For Honor vikings speak icelandic and i loved it so i came here ;D

  • @mattimus1979
    @mattimus1979 3 года назад

    As I was born and raised in the US and know little to nothing of the Scandinavian languages, Should I start with one first? I would like to learn most or all including Old Norse.

  • @pumalein
    @pumalein 2 года назад

    I am also deciding to learn Icelandic. Which way to study would you recommend tho?

  • @SuperGamli
    @SuperGamli 3 года назад

    Þessi náungi sem þú talaðir við er skrýtinn.

  • @mrhouse8936
    @mrhouse8936 3 года назад +1

    Utlaegur

  • @fyivid
    @fyivid 4 года назад

    Being from Western Norway myself (it is even closer on paper, as both are old West Norse variants of Norse), it is really strange to listen to icelandic, basically what you said, it is in a way like listening to your own language, but at the same time, so very different. But I felt I could always understand what the guy you were talking to said.
    But you did great though. You could easily learn icelandic pretty well if you kept it up for a few years!

    • @TheSwedishLad
      @TheSwedishLad  4 года назад

      Life goal!! But I really should go and visit the island. It would help immensely.

  • @vvsandgaming4648
    @vvsandgaming4648 4 года назад

    The "Þ , þ" letter has a sound very similar to the "TH" in the word "Thought" (a hard sounding "TH")
    The "Ð , ð" letter has a sound very similar to the "TH" in the word "This" (a soft sounding "TH")
    You weren't far off with the F or PH sounds you made but the other two are more accurate in pronounciation, and the name "Svíþjóð" is actually a VERY good word to practice those sounds as it incorporates them both.

    • @vvsandgaming4648
      @vvsandgaming4648 4 года назад

      @Əbu Zörğhanürr At-Türkməni same sounds yes but they have a different harshness to them. Icelandic is my native language and I have helped many people get those sounds right.
      The harder to teach pronounciations are the different ways we use LL and GG sounds depending on what other letters are around them.

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss 4 года назад

      The distinction between þ and ð is linguistically called "unvoiced" and "voiced". They're nearly the same sound, but have a single difference between them: one is said with the vocal chords "turned off" and the other is said with the vocal cords on.
      'p' & 'b'; 't' & 'd'; 'k' & 'g'; 'f' & 'v'; 'þ' & 'ð'; 's' & 'z' - they're all unvoiced/voiced pairs.

    • @lorraineb682
      @lorraineb682 4 года назад

      @Əbu Zörğhanürr At-Türkməni Irish still has them. T is often pronounced as "th"

  • @BENJAMIN366
    @BENJAMIN366 4 года назад +1

    if this man can speak icelandic in a week who says I can´t, I don´t know if being a spanish native speaker will have any advantage or disadvantge