How to say ÅÄÖ (Swedish Umlauts)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 ноя 2018
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Комментарии • 646

  • @hippopotomostrosesquippeda5804
    @hippopotomostrosesquippeda5804 3 года назад +85

    Teacher: The test isn't that hard
    The test:

  • @paperglu6640
    @paperglu6640 4 года назад +401

    ÅO sounds like the old minecraft damage sound lol

    • @gytan2221
      @gytan2221 4 года назад +22

      How villagers talk??? Sound!? 😂 ÅÄÖ

    • @gytan2221
      @gytan2221 4 года назад +13

      鄭善澤 Yes it is, It’s actually a Swedish game 🇸🇪 from Stockholm and I am very proud of being Swedish bcuz we are the powerhouse of Nordic ! Spotify, IKEA, Volvo, H&M and more are Swedish companies and mostly based in Stockholm!!! We also have a lot of great DJs like Avicii ! 😂 and Inspiring ppl like Greta Thunberg! 😆

    • @hannahalexandra1419
      @hannahalexandra1419 4 года назад +3

      Infinity 25 - well done!!! You SHOULD be proud! We in the US need to LEARN!!!! 🙄

    • @gytan2221
      @gytan2221 4 года назад +3

      Hannah Alexandra It’s actually so easy! Unless for some words that involved it where the pronunciation is tricky. But most words with the umlauts are pretty easy !

    • @servantofaeie1569
      @servantofaeie1569 3 года назад +3

      Infinity 25 Greta Thunberg isnt inspiring, shes an illuminati puppet and an embarassment

  • @ida807
    @ida807 4 года назад +287

    Quick tip to my non swedish speaking friends!
    - How I know that you can say the Letters Å Ä & Ö
    Å = can you say fOr lOre or fOrk? - Then you can say Å.
    For Lore Fork... and even the word Or... if you keep your R silent you are left with the Å sound when saying those words... Think Gangster; FO'SHO! we'd spell it FÅ' SHÅ' and it will still sound the same...... Får (Sheep in swedish) Lår (Thigh in swedish) Fårk...
    Ä = can you say AIr, fAEry or fEAther, lEtter or even hAmsAndwhich? -> then you can say Ä.
    Air, Faery Feather Letter... say those words, focus on the sounds you're making... Är ( IS in swedish) Färy, Fäther Lättär...
    Same pronounciation.
    Ö = can you order a HambUrgEr or have you the ability to say nUrsEry or even know you to say wOrd? -> you can say Ö!!
    ə(r) --- keep the Rs quiet... that's the sound of Ö...
    Burger, Nursery, Word... Börgör Nörsöry Wörd...
    Now. Let me change the spelling those words for you to the swedish corresponding letter. You still say it in english/american, like you always do, preferably with the illinoisian accent ;-) & I'll change the corresponding sound to the letters Å Ä and Ö.
    Å = can you say fÅr, lÅre or fÅrk? - then you can say Å.
    Ä= can you say Är, fÄry, fÄther, lÄtter, or even hÄmsÄndwhich? -> then you can say Ä.
    Ö= can you order a hambÖrgÖr, or have you the ability to say nÖrsÖry, or even know how to say wÖrd?
    -> Yoou can say Ö!!
    Don't practice so hard trying to do something you already know how!
    - You're welcome! - IT REALLY IS NOT THAT COMPLICATED... Just THINK a little. speak those words normally and you'll realize the sound you're making at that point in pronounciations... Is the sound of Å the sound of Ä and the sound of Ö....
    Now if my toddler could get it when I was an auPair.... You can too... just .. don't be that guy that does not get the obvious... pretend you do and you'll be fine...

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +42

      Nice one!

    • @erexford
      @erexford 4 года назад +9

      Hey, the first three are very helpful tips!
      I didn't understand the second group, though.

    • @ida807
      @ida807 4 года назад +6

      Elizabeth Rexford in the second group, it is the same words but the sound is replaced with the swedish counter prt letter. fOUr becomes fÅr etc. it's same word sound with different spelling ;-) basically a simolified way of writing which one of the letters has the same fonetic sounds of Å Ä and Ö. U and E in hamburger is the same sound as Ö, where ou in four is the same fonetic sound as Å and ai in Air is the same fonetic sound as Ä. so capitalized fonetic sound is hambÖrgEr fÅr and AIr ;) it's a way I used when substitute teaching swedish abroad.

    • @cytho1302
      @cytho1302 4 года назад

      Pixii Dah 👏

    • @tigercomet23
      @tigercomet23 3 года назад +6

      I feel like this only applies in British English. These examples don’t make any sense if you try to do it with an American accent. I keep having to imaging a British person saying these sounds.

  • @skatingpower2512
    @skatingpower2512 5 лет назад +204

    Tack så mycket!

    • @dalescrib1549
      @dalescrib1549 4 года назад

      skating power Very much welcome

    • @rasmuus10
      @rasmuus10 3 года назад

      Åäö

    • @User-kf7cx
      @User-kf7cx 3 года назад +2

      Duolingo?

    • @sanjaykumarkancher
      @sanjaykumarkancher 3 года назад

      Välkommen

    • @andrewkaplanc
      @andrewkaplanc 3 года назад +2

      @@sanjaykumarkancher I'm not an expert in Swedish... but I am like 98% sure that to say you're welcome it is "Varsågod". Välkommen is like welcome to my home type thing. :p

  • @hnhn3409
    @hnhn3409 3 года назад +63

    I am a Korean learning Swedish for the first time.
    I understand what you're saying through a translator on RUclips, but your explanation is really easy!
    Thanks!
    I feel like I'm getting closer to Swedish today! 😁😁

    • @LeonSandgren
      @LeonSandgren 2 года назад +3

      Oh that's cool! :D
      I'm Swedish and I'm learning Korean

    • @BlowOnMyMagicFlute
      @BlowOnMyMagicFlute Год назад

      Why swedish?

    • @junelee8252
      @junelee8252 Год назад

      Hejhej..여기도 스웨덴어 배우는 한국인이요! 1년 전이신데..이제 스웨덴어 잘하시나요? 저는 이제 시작입니다...이 모음들 정말 장난 아니네요.발음이 발음이🙄 정말로 참말로 ㅋㅋㅋ
      좋은 하루 되세요!

    • @katydid2465
      @katydid2465 Год назад

      Why are you trying to learn Swedish in Korea?

    • @itspeachiie
      @itspeachiie Год назад

      jag är koreansk-amerikansk och lär mig svenska! 우리는 할 수 있어요

  • @eken81
    @eken81 5 лет назад +192

    I'm a native speaker but ended up here anyways. Was looking for how these letters entered the Swedish language. You missed to mention something interesting. Å and Ö are words in Swedish by themselves. Å= river Ö= Island.

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  5 лет назад +28

      Det kunde man ha sagt, men det var inte fokus i den här videon så glömde helt bort det. Bokstäverna kom i samma veva som bibelöversättningen på 1500-talet, så att man inte skulle skriva som fienden Dansken. Så är legenden i alla fall :)

    • @jamesmclaughlin4025
      @jamesmclaughlin4025 4 года назад +4

      Heinäkuu joko öljy käyttää jo ennen måste ön mitä näkyy

    • @user-nd2ij9oh1t
      @user-nd2ij9oh1t 4 года назад +2

      wow

    • @LittleWhole
      @LittleWhole 4 года назад +10

      @@jamesmclaughlin4025 I'm guessing this is Finnish just by looking at the "ää" suffix lol

    • @servantofaeie1569
      @servantofaeie1569 3 года назад +7

      LittleWhole Finnish looks like Japanese with Swedish letters

  • @javirezio5
    @javirezio5 4 года назад +21

    I already speak German and I came here thinking "Ok, I already dominate Ä and Ö so now I only need to learn 1 new sound"... It was a perfect illusion ... xD

  • @shahanamay1936
    @shahanamay1936 3 года назад +22

    Your facial expressions made me laugh so much! This was surprisingly interesting and fun.

  • @ClassicGuy1982
    @ClassicGuy1982 4 года назад +25

    Gotta say, this is by far one of the best videos, I have seen and heard in the instructing of: "How to say the Swedish Umlauts". Great job! Like the "pace music" sound in the video.

    • @nordscan9043
      @nordscan9043 3 года назад

      Which the English deliberately ignore, when pronouncing names like Björn, it's annoying.

  • @guillobot
    @guillobot 5 лет назад +58

    First 5 minutes into learning Swedish, and I'm beat... :S

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  5 лет назад +13

      Don't start with pronunciation then!

    • @devonoknabo2582
      @devonoknabo2582 4 года назад +5

      @@sayitinswedish why?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +12

      @@devonoknabo2582 because if it beats you, it's better to learn the actual language first, isn't it ;)

    • @devonoknabo2582
      @devonoknabo2582 4 года назад +12

      @@sayitinswedish If you heard me try to speak sewdish you would probly cringe.

    • @paulingvar
      @paulingvar 4 года назад +4

      The important thing is to notic difference between lon and short vowels

  • @samii3890
    @samii3890 4 года назад +14

    I just started doing this on a whim and this is actually fascinating! Thank you for being so clear and personable!!

  • @saraannbutler4186
    @saraannbutler4186 5 лет назад +9

    You explained very well. I liked how the word was shown as you pronounced it and then you said it again without the word being shown.

  • @Karina-Loves-Andreas
    @Karina-Loves-Andreas 3 года назад +11

    I wish I could hear what my Swedish friends hear when I attempt these vowels, because it's apparently quite funny.

  • @klaus-heinzmorales4448
    @klaus-heinzmorales4448 4 года назад +6

    Hej Joakim, I'm a student that recently started, you're a great teacher. I've learned very much with you. Tack

  • @ClassicGuy1982
    @ClassicGuy1982 5 лет назад +1

    Goda uttalanden du gjorde för att förklara och vocalize bokstäverna för den icke-grammatiska svenska personen för att lyssna och förstå hur vi behöver uttala svenska umlauterna i ord. Mycket bra och tack för att du förklarade ljuden att säga det.

  • @heckincat1406
    @heckincat1406 Год назад +3

    As a swede, i wish all of you learners good luck👍

  • @julietaaboka3285
    @julietaaboka3285 Год назад

    Fantastic job!
    It makes a lot of sense to me, because I am not a beginner any more, but now I struggle to assimilate what I have already studied with my everyday life experience in Sweden.
    This lesson was very helpful, thank you!

  • @jamierbb
    @jamierbb 4 года назад +4

    I'm at the VERY early stages of learning Swedish right now, and this video is helping me out a lot. Thank you!

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +2

      Cool, I'm glad I could help. Where are you from? :)

    • @jamierbb
      @jamierbb 4 года назад +1

      @@sayitinswedish North America

  • @thamaragerig9587
    @thamaragerig9587 5 лет назад +11

    Keep it up! This is super helpful!

  • @KaisaKylakoski
    @KaisaKylakoski 5 лет назад +90

    Å is "Swedish o" in Finnish.

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  5 лет назад +14

      Kyllä!

    • @johnlentokone7318
      @johnlentokone7318 5 лет назад +6

      In Finnish a standalone Ä is said like ÄÄ, Ö like ÖÖ and Å like "ruotsalainen oo". That's a diffucult phone :)

    • @lingonberriesofwrath1836
      @lingonberriesofwrath1836 4 года назад

      The Finnish "O" is "Å" in Swedish. Finnish "U" is the Swedish "O". The Finnish "Y" has no equivalent in Swedish, but is sort of a mix of the Swedish "Y" and "U". It's actually somewhat similar to the german "Ü". Many finns find it difficult to pronounce the swedish "Y" as in "Yxa" (axe), and it becomes "Üxa". The "Ä" and "Ö" is about the same in both languages, as previously stated.
      The Finnish written language is an interesting one, in that it's pronounced almost exactly the way it's written, if you know how to pronounce the vowels. My reading speed is pretty good, so I actually have an easier time reading finnish out loud, than some of my finnish friends. They are born in Sweden, and speak Finnish perfectly, but they've never learned how to read it properly.
      Hilariously enough, they sometimes ask me to read out loud what a text says, because they can't do it themselves. I have no idea what I'm reading, but they - for the most part - understand me perfectly. They say it's weird to hear a "Svenne" read finnish, since my pronunciation is far from perfect, even though I know how to say the aforementioned vowels.

  • @p0tat0s0up
    @p0tat0s0up 3 года назад +2

    I just stumbled across your channel today. You’re so funny and charismatic and this was really helpful considering I just started learning Swedish recently!

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  3 года назад

      Thank you! Why did you start learning Swedish?

    • @p0tat0s0up
      @p0tat0s0up 3 года назад

      @@sayitinswedish hey good question! I’m not really sure, if I’m being honest... I just felt like learning a new language and Swedish seemed like a cool one to learn ;)

  • @CuriousWorldProductions
    @CuriousWorldProductions 3 года назад +26

    So how do you know which sound to use if you're English?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  3 года назад +2

      Could you elaborate? :)

    • @CuriousWorldProductions
      @CuriousWorldProductions 3 года назад +3

      @@sayitinswedish For example. Skåne County. Is that the long sound or the short, or doesn't it matter?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  3 года назад +10

      Skåne has the long vowel sound. A rule of thumb is that double consonants will be preceeded by a short vowel.

    • @CuriousWorldProductions
      @CuriousWorldProductions 3 года назад +3

      @@sayitinswedish This has been a great help with my next video. Thank you.

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  3 года назад +3

      That's awesome, glad I could help, mate👌

  • @bramblebop1904
    @bramblebop1904 5 лет назад +4

    Super. First time explained clearly, about preceding R.

  • @6abriel6uzmanok
    @6abriel6uzmanok 5 лет назад +16

    Great video! Greetings from Argentina 🇦🇷🇸🇪

  • @annesarakronvald
    @annesarakronvald Год назад +2

    So good to hear the different of each sounds. It is hard but I won't give up.

  • @david_108
    @david_108 7 месяцев назад +1

    Swedish sense of humor is lovely. Thank you mate!

  • @chuckh9168
    @chuckh9168 2 года назад

    What brought me here was the line “Så kall är den smärtan - När de du älskar kommer tillbaka från de döda”. A Vildhjarta lyric.
    Now I can thall properly. Thank you!

  • @RALshacho
    @RALshacho 4 года назад +9

    Thank you for the lesson! I'm planning to go to Stockholm this weekend! :D

  • @scarletRN
    @scarletRN 3 года назад +4

    You always make me laugh and I LEARN. Thank you so much!

  • @xenon8117
    @xenon8117 Год назад +2

    I still have no idea how to say them but I'm sure I'll get there. This video definitely helped give me get an idea and I'm sure I'll revisit it a few times yet to let my brain soak it in. Tack.

  • @Blue_Neptune21
    @Blue_Neptune21 5 лет назад +8

    Tack så mycket!!!

  • @oceanoliu6239
    @oceanoliu6239 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for the explanation!!! It is so clear!!

  • @electrogrrrl
    @electrogrrrl 10 месяцев назад +1

    I was at IKEA today and decided once and for all to learn how Swedish vowels with umlauts sound.🙂🙂

  • @breakawayfromme
    @breakawayfromme 3 года назад +1

    I'm going to have to re-watch this alot of times and take notes but hopefully ill get there eventually
    tack så mycket

  • @SJ-cc6fp
    @SJ-cc6fp 3 года назад +1

    You’re so funny! Thanks for the great video. I’ve struggled with these sounds.

  • @maribeldragsraks4066
    @maribeldragsraks4066 4 года назад +5

    it's hard for me to learn “ö” but you have helped me a lot, tack så mycket

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +2

      Hang in there!

    •  4 года назад +1

      I have learned every unlauted vowel
      Ä = Ɛ but close to Æ
      Ë = Ɛ
      Ï = Same as I but the umlaut on top of an I indicates that it is seperated
      Ö = Ø
      Ü = Y

  • @elecreal
    @elecreal 4 года назад +9

    Tack så mycket! Now I know, why there’s a massive difference between my and Swedish pronunciation of Åre.. 🤦‍♂️

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +1

      Uh oh.

    • @ida807
      @ida807 3 года назад

      "What a handsome face" is swedish for " was he the one who farted?"

    • @lokis7230
      @lokis7230 2 года назад

      @@ida807 No.

  • @sergeiburtsev5712
    @sergeiburtsev5712 5 лет назад +43

    Thanks! This is very explanatory! Coud you please compare "i" and "y", also "e" and "ä"? Also maybe other similarly sounding vovels.

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  5 лет назад +8

      Good idea :)

    • @brokendrug
      @brokendrug 4 года назад +1

      When you hear a word for example "Äng” which means meadow. It’s pronounced eng but spelled äng and it’s because if u have an ä that’s before ng in a word it’s pronounced e. Or for example again Slätt that means plain. It’s pronounced slett but it’s pronounced with an e because of the two t. I hope that this helped, the Swedish grammar is super complicated. You could probably write a novel with 2000 pages on how to learn the Swedish grammar. Fun fact the Swedish grammar is one of the hardest and most complicated grammar in the world. Sorry if it was confusing. I’m just a dumb Swed who are just trying to help

    • @stekeln
      @stekeln 3 года назад +2

      ​@@brokendrug Swedish grammar is really easy if you compare it to most other germanic languages. Also, grammar isn't really what this is about since grammar is how words are used and changed to form sentences. Orthography is about how to spell words in a language. Even so, the orthography of Swedish is of medium difficulty at most, especially if you compare it to the orthography of English.

    • @owieczkanapolu7327
      @owieczkanapolu7327 2 года назад

      @@brokendrug Det var som attan. Menar det att det verkade inte alls så i mitt fall, fast jämnförelsen består av min tid i Sverige under 80 talet (yngre då lol) och nu, medans ja kör så hårt jag kan att lära mig polska, som, för mig i alla fall är betydligt svårare. Snacka om grammatik...

  • @carloscarl5801
    @carloscarl5801 5 лет назад +5

    thanks a million!!

  • @miguelbonilla8791
    @miguelbonilla8791 3 года назад +2

    Spanish speaker here, it's very complex to associate that you can use the whole range between A-E-O... Pretty fascinating

  • @jasonearle7345
    @jasonearle7345 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks brother that was very helpful!!

  • @GrahamsYouTube
    @GrahamsYouTube 4 года назад +1

    Tack så mycket, very helpful!

  • @globaltraveller
    @globaltraveller 5 лет назад +2

    I’ve always wondered. Top explanation sir you deserve a cigar 👍

  • @user-ni8ep1nk9u
    @user-ni8ep1nk9u 3 года назад +1

    Hi from Greece! I'm trying to learn how to speak swedish, so thanx a mil for your help!! Yiota...

  • @davidjosemoreno6435
    @davidjosemoreno6435 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks for the video! Is there any kind of rule to know when to use any of the two the long/short sounds in å, ä? Or should i learn how to pronounce each word? Tack Tack!

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  5 лет назад +2

      There is something called the quantity rule in Swedish which means that if you see a word spelled with a double consonant, the preceding vowel is supposed to be short and the consonant long.

  • @harrihaffi2713
    @harrihaffi2713 5 лет назад +7

    Old school ftw!
    Ps: Tony’s chocolonely is also fantastic!

  • @learnalanguagewithleslie
    @learnalanguagewithleslie 4 года назад +2

    Hello, it's a very good video, I tend to avoid learning languages with lots of vowels, hehe.
    I mainly wanted to ask: Is the Swedish Ä the same as the Finnish Ä ?
    Or maybe that is better asked: Do you know if the Finnish Ä is the same as the Swedish Ä ?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +4

      The Swedish Ä in front of an R is the same as the Finnish Ä :)

  • @11lvr11
    @11lvr11 4 года назад +2

    Thank you so much, that's helpful:3

  • @MegaJohn144
    @MegaJohn144 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this. I knew about ö before r, but I didn't realize there were both long and short versions, and I knew nothing about the 4 sounds of ä. I know that if you want to sound like a native in any language, you have to get the vowels right, så tackar för det!

  • @tessjohansson77
    @tessjohansson77 9 месяцев назад

    🎉my husband has a problem listening this sound from me which Im trying my best...thank you for this!❤😊

  • @martinadocs2211
    @martinadocs2211 4 года назад +2

    hi, I found it's really helpful, thank you so much. I would love to learn how to differ the sounds when pronouncing or reading certain words. I mean I want to know when this letter is pronounced this way, and when that letter is pronounced that way. is there any tips please. thank you so much

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +1

      I made another video about all the sounds in Swedish, if that's what you're looking for. Also there is a pronunciation course on sayitinswedish.com with some examples.

  • @exelentation1
    @exelentation1 5 лет назад +11

    So ä is almost always like "cat" or "man", but before -R it becomes like "Carl" or "sharp" in English. I´ve also seen that - ä in Swedish becomes an -e in Stockholm...is that true? instead of saying "Jag är" they say "Jag errrrrr " ....true?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  5 лет назад +7

      No, Carl and Sharp have a distinct A sound, just like in "Jag". It doesn't resemble Ä at all. Yes, in Stockholm, Ä tends to become a long E sound. Not so much now as before but when it comes to "är", it is very commonly pronounced just "e".

  • @RandomAFP
    @RandomAFP 2 года назад

    I'm going to need to keep coming back to these...

  • @gruffbikerdude1206
    @gruffbikerdude1206 3 года назад +1

    I been playing a lot of Generation Zero and thanks to you, I believe I can properly pronounce Överbyslätten!

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  3 года назад +1

      I need to get back playing that game, it looks amazing.

    • @gruffbikerdude1206
      @gruffbikerdude1206 3 года назад

      It is! It's come a long way since it was first released and they are still updating it monthly! Tremendous fun with friends.

  • @wenyibo
    @wenyibo 2 года назад +1

    thank you! u r funny! i like the way how u explain it to us! thank u!!! :)

  • @manaralghanem7864
    @manaralghanem7864 5 лет назад +2

    Hej, Joakim. Could you please make a video for the rest of the vowels? their short and long sounds per se. Thanks man !

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  5 лет назад

      I have audio lessons for all sounds on sayitinswedish.com

  • @ladymunch0
    @ladymunch0 3 года назад +1

    that song is such a bloody earworm. the damn thing kept coming to haunt me through the whole video lol.

  • @RG_Cardthree
    @RG_Cardthree 4 года назад +3

    Ja äntligen en bra kanal som kan lära amerakanska personer svenska

  • @sophx7845
    @sophx7845 2 года назад

    Great videos! How do you know when reading words which sounds to make for these letters? Are there certain grammatical rules? Thanks

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  2 года назад

      Practice, mostly :) The ortography isn't super reliable.

  • @duaashal3931
    @duaashal3931 5 лет назад +2

    You are so funny and very helpful thanks

  • @alicerainford3474
    @alicerainford3474 4 года назад

    Super helpful video, thank you!! I'm learning Swedish at the moment, but I have a speech impediment and can't make a 'rolled' r sound? Is this gonna affect the meaning of the words?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +1

      There are a lot of ways to say a Swedish R, I have several videos on it. This one for instance: ruclips.net/video/B3hXRMlyTWo/видео.html

    • @alicerainford3474
      @alicerainford3474 4 года назад

      @@sayitinswedish Fantastic, thank you!!

  • @jamestedjo3736
    @jamestedjo3736 4 года назад +3

    On my tour to Sweden, bought an Engelska - Svenska Ordbok yay

  • @mariiasegarra180
    @mariiasegarra180 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much ❤

  • @lannigucci
    @lannigucci Год назад +1

    Thank you for such a great tutorial. It was very helpful, and I'll be looking up more of your videos. Do you know IPA? (International Phonetic Alphabet) I think you'd enjoy learning it and using it to help people pronounce.

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  Год назад

      I know IPA and I'm already using it to help people understand Swedish pronunciation :)

  • @faabmu1769
    @faabmu1769 4 года назад +2

    u r sooo good teacher

  • @Suhaisuha1108
    @Suhaisuha1108 4 месяца назад

    tacksåmycket!!

  • @vitorhugocastellaovieira8279
    @vitorhugocastellaovieira8279 2 года назад +1

    So Å short sound sounds like the Portuguese Ó sound, cool!

  • @itsonepixel
    @itsonepixel Год назад +1

    Ö is my favourite letter
    It's also the best letter

  • @LarryShone
    @LarryShone 3 года назад

    Tack!

  • @JuliaSiulea
    @JuliaSiulea 4 года назад +1

    Tack 💙 x

  • @dontsubscribetome3262
    @dontsubscribetome3262 3 года назад +3

    Ö is basically like the i in bird

  • @ramamonato5039
    @ramamonato5039 10 месяцев назад

    0:49 Your English spoken with a GA accent is só good that I initially thought you were American. Bút, when you reached this word "let-ter"and there is no nasalized "a" before /m/ or /n/ in your pronunciation, I could convince myself you are not American. I understand and like your video because you speak clearly and slowly. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us who want to get information about Swedish. May you always be rich!

  • @jhonnysnz
    @jhonnysnz Год назад

    Top!

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 2 года назад

    öl - öppen - ört - öra can you make this words for me in ipa
    can you recommend a good dictionary for English Swedish with IPA

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  2 года назад

      I don't have any recommendations for you, sorry.
      øːl
      ²øpːən
      œʈː
      ²œːra
      I'm not an expert on IPA though, but something like this should be correct.

  • @MichaelNight
    @MichaelNight 4 года назад +4

    Chuck Nårris

  • @fredrikliljeblad1209
    @fredrikliljeblad1209 3 года назад

    Hej, Joakim! jag moste be om ursaekt foer att jag har fott skriva so konstigt, men, som sagt kan jag intevskriva ordentligt paa denna djävulska datorn! Ursaekta foerlaot!

  • @briannam7780
    @briannam7780 4 года назад +1

    So, are the last two sounds for both ä and ö just used when they're in front of r?

  • @werdlederdle
    @werdlederdle 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for the video! Hope the guinea pigs are well!

  • @erikahernandez4795
    @erikahernandez4795 3 года назад

    Gracias, estuvo excelente, saludos desde Mexico 🇲🇽

  • @victoriagaona2496
    @victoriagaona2496 5 лет назад +11

    Can you make a video about the sound of "i", please? I can't seem to reproduce it :)

    • @plutonian2770
      @plutonian2770 5 лет назад +1

      ........
      Reproduce?

    • @DasIstGoose
      @DasIstGoose 5 лет назад +5

      Yeah- they can't "replicate the sounds. Reproduce is saying to recreate. Not whatever you were thinking.

    • @plutonian2770
      @plutonian2770 5 лет назад

      Oh

    • @brokendrug
      @brokendrug 4 года назад +1

      I in Swedish is pronounced the same as E in English

    •  4 года назад +2

      He already did it

  • @hankfrankly7240
    @hankfrankly7240 3 года назад

    I understood your english perfectly. 😊

    • @perbergman8762
      @perbergman8762 2 года назад

      Want to understand his swedish perfectly too? 😉

  • @dubiouspissdrinker
    @dubiouspissdrinker 4 года назад

    If you want to say träd do you have to roll your tongue or is there a way you can say it without rolling? because I cannot roll my thounge

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад

      Yes you have to do that, but in a bunch of dialects it's just a quick tap. If you speak normally it is just super light, so don't worry. In Stockholm it's even less than that!

    • @dubiouspissdrinker
      @dubiouspissdrinker 4 года назад

      @@sayitinswedish okay that's good to know thanks :)

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 2 года назад +1

    9:44 in this time do you mean [Œ] or [œ?]

  • @pravoslavn
    @pravoslavn 4 года назад +1

    I know it is not within your scope to do historical phonology, but it would be helpful for non-Swedish speakers to know where these vowel sounds came from, in the development of the language. One always learns relationally. I know English, German and Russian, so I har all sorts of similarities. Good work on your part.

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад

      I'm definitely not the right person to go into historical details of phonology.

  • @tlskls7655
    @tlskls7655 2 года назад

    HERE it is!

  • @matsgahnstromjobb933
    @matsgahnstromjobb933 3 года назад +5

    Then we have the realy long "Ö" primary used late at saturday nights by realy pissed guys hitting on some poor girl. Say after me - "öööÖÖÖööhhh".

  • @tlskls7655
    @tlskls7655 2 года назад

    Tak!

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 2 года назад +1

    great video for ö in öra do you mean in ipa [Œːra] or [²œ̞ːra] [œːra] . please add ipa to your video, you have a great videos. Thank you.

  • @zinougame4698
    @zinougame4698 3 года назад

    Merci ☺️

  • @TheBlues088
    @TheBlues088 4 года назад

    Hallo, ich habe eine Frage an Sie: warum gebrauchen Sie ein Wörterbuch (Buch), wenn eine Menge Onlinetranslators benutzt werden können? Finden Sie, dass Buch einen Vorteil hat und welches? (Btw, ich bevorzüge auch das Buch noch immer :))

    • @TheBlues088
      @TheBlues088 4 года назад +1

      Und ja, das war ein ganz nützliches Video. Danke! Schwedisch ist schwer richtig und genau auszusprechen (zum Beispiel beim Lesen etc.), habe viel Ärger damit, aber die Grammatik finde ich gar nicht so schwer. Wie Englisch oder sogar leichter. Danke noch einmal.

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +1

      Selbst benutze ich fast ausschließlich Online-Dienste.

    • @TheBlues088
      @TheBlues088 4 года назад

      @@sayitinswedish Hvala.

  • @xzl20212
    @xzl20212 2 года назад

    What's the song at the beginning? from NORWEIGIAN?

  • @computergeeq
    @computergeeq 4 года назад

    Trying to learn swedish (as an american) in this video and ended up also learning some english! Didnt know the word "lark" until this video! Im learning swedish AND english lol

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  4 года назад +2

      Maybe there is a more common word for "lark" that I'm not aware of?

    • @computergeeq
      @computergeeq 4 года назад

      ​@@sayitinswedish Im from Minnesota, and in my region we just usually say "bird" for every type of small bird haha. Maybe other parts of the US say specific ones. We usually only specify if its a bigger one, like a turkey or a goose mostly because turkeys can ruin your car if you run into them and attack you, as well as geese. So they have quite a reputation around here for being quite nasty.

  • @sststr
    @sststr 2 года назад

    So, this is extremely useful is knowing how to pronounce each sound, but is there a reliable way to know when to use the short vs. long sound for each? I have this place name "Råbäck" that I am trying to figure out how to pronounce. And I can't find any videos anywhere where it is being said, so I am still a bit confused. This video helps narrow down the possible pronunciations of the name, but doesn't nail it down entirely. My guess is a long å and a short ä?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  2 года назад +1

      Your guess is correct.

    • @sststr
      @sststr 2 года назад

      @@sayitinswedish Thank you!

    • @sststr
      @sststr 2 года назад

      For the curious, I came across that place name in the story "Count Magnus" by Montague Rhodes James.

  • @hampus3699
    @hampus3699 5 лет назад +5

    Good luck to everyone that swedish. I'm from sweden

    • @drahsyxip
      @drahsyxip 4 года назад

      With a German letter in ur name? Ok

    • @hampus3699
      @hampus3699 4 года назад

      pix sc yea my grandfathers dad was from germany 🙂

    • @ozkupelaileenyc4330
      @ozkupelaileenyc4330 Год назад

      @@hampus3699 my grandfather was from germany he killed hitler

  • @ylenia7834
    @ylenia7834 2 года назад

    Is there some good music to learn the pronounce?

  • @SanoDuarminidol
    @SanoDuarminidol Год назад

    Can I use this in my discord server to help people learn swedish?

  • @mattthompson6281
    @mattthompson6281 3 года назад +1

    It’s like the English word War=wår or quarter=quårter warm=wårm etc

  • @jadewoodridge61
    @jadewoodridge61 3 года назад

    how do you know when to pronounce long or short in a word?

    • @sayitinswedish
      @sayitinswedish  3 года назад +1

      Mostly a double consonant will indicate a short vowel and a long consonant, but this is not always the case.

  • @BookofJoshuaVerse24-15
    @BookofJoshuaVerse24-15 3 года назад

    谢谢 merci gracias och tak. Thanks

  • @asbel1984
    @asbel1984 5 лет назад +2

    thanks for the explanation. If i go to Swede i'll invite you to drink öl !