Teaching Icelandic PART 1

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
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    FAQ:
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    where are you from? Iceland
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Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @Hrafna
    @Hrafna  6 лет назад +938

    Hi babes! First of all, like I said in the video I am no pro! haha! This video is for those who have been asking me to teach Icelandic, so basically I'm just trying to help out as many people as I can since there is not that many Icelandic lessons online. I may seem very chill in this video it's because I was trying to focus haha! This is my first time trying to teach a language but I am so excited to teach you guys more x

    • @PhinkerPie
      @PhinkerPie 6 лет назад +3

      Hi, do you think it is right, if I translate my description to videos using just online Translate ? I have the notice that it is translated using online Translator.

    • @lucieni
      @lucieni 6 лет назад +4

      Thankyou so much, I love your videos and it’s such a beautiful language to listen to but soooooo tongue twisty!! Keep on keeping on xx

    • @PhinkerPie
      @PhinkerPie 6 лет назад +2

      one of the most demanding languages

    • @lucieni
      @lucieni 6 лет назад +2

      PhinkerPie it must be an absolute no brainer for an Icelander to learn English!

    • @PhinkerPie
      @PhinkerPie 6 лет назад +4

      but it is interesting because these are both anglosaxon (germanic) languages so they should be similar

  • @meandmybobbygee1812
    @meandmybobbygee1812 5 лет назад +3086

    Someone getting hurt: Ow!
    Me, an intellectual: *Á*

  • @chanamoriel8696
    @chanamoriel8696 4 года назад +402

    When I was growing up, many years ago, my best friend was from Iceland. Her name was Berglind Balonskinky. That is as close as I can get, spelling wise. When her family came to the US, her father changed her name to Linda and their family name to Carlson. We were inseparable all thru high school. She passed away 15 years ago and I still miss her very much.

  • @caiquemarlon5579
    @caiquemarlon5579 4 года назад +794

    7:12:
    Me: hm it's not that hard after all
    Her: my name is harshjsshusgs
    Me: what

  • @toxicperson8936
    @toxicperson8936 4 года назад +372

    Icelandic is such an interesting language, because it’s like a time capsule. It had the same ancestor had Swedish, Norwegian, & Danish, which was Old Norse, however it hadn’t changed as much as those other languages have. Modern Icelandic people would actually be able to understand the majority of Old Norse.

    • @stanislok.7106
      @stanislok.7106 2 года назад +14

      Yeah, because it's an island in the middle of ocean that didn't use to have a real ability to be influenced by other languages.

    • @joern888
      @joern888 2 года назад +6

      Same with faroe islands

    • @mimirsvision9929
      @mimirsvision9929 2 года назад +11

      The closest to what real Vikings spoke

    • @CarpetHater
      @CarpetHater 2 года назад +5

      They would be able to understand writen old norse very well, but they would have almost as much trouble understanding spoken old norse as a norwegian person would (atleast using deconstructed old norse). The pronounciation between old norse and modern icelandic has changed quite a bit.
      But yeah, if you wanted to learn old norse you would probably be best of learning icelandic and then afterwards learn the old icelandic pronouncation.

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 8 месяцев назад

      Most words are similar in Icelandic and Old Norse, but there are also many thousands of newer words in Icelandic that do not exist in Old Norse, plus there are also many words in Old Norse that aren’t used in Icelandic or that are used with a different meaning, plus the pronunciation is a bit different! I am actually learning both Old Norse and Icelandic and am close to intermediate level in both, and also, Norwegian (close to advanced level) and Dutch (advanced level) and Faroese and Danish and Gothic (beginner level in these three) and Swedish and German (Intermediate level) etc, and they are all super fun to learn, with gorgeous words that are easy to learn and remember, and I highly recommend learning all / some / any of these languages, as they are as gorgeous / refined / poetic as English, so they are too pretty not to know, and all other Germanic languages are also gorgeous! Hopefully more and more ppl start teaching Icelandic and Old Norse and Faroese etc on yt in the near future, and hopefully many ppl find out about these gorgeous languages and start learning them, and I highly suggest that ppl that make yt videos make a lot of videos teaching Icelandic etc and covering all verbs and prepositions / adverbs / conjunctions etc and rare words / poetic words and idioms etc, as there aren’t enough resources and videos on yt, and making lots of HD videos like this definitely helps reach more ppl, I actually couldn’t even believe that there aren’t many videos teaching Icelandic, considering how pretty this language is, there should definitely be a lot more videos, for example, other pretty languages such as Dutch and German that are a lot more known have many yts that make HD videos teaching them, so it’s very easy to learn Dutch and German super fast because there so many videos and so many vocab videos and many videos with Dutch and German subs etc, so it would be a lot easier to learn Icelandic if there were lots of HD videos teaching and covering all the words and all details on grammar etc, so I feel like jumping for joy every time I find a new video teaching Icelandic, knowing how hard they are to find!

  • @iamreiver
    @iamreiver 5 лет назад +2072

    The only reason it's hard to learn is because there are no good learning resources to learn from

    • @painxxxl
      @painxxxl 5 лет назад +95

      Not exactly. Its known that icelandic language has lot of unique terms and words. That causes trouble when learning, you have practically nothing to rely on whe learning.

    • @Ubarberet
      @Ubarberet 5 лет назад +167

      That's not the "only" reason. Icelandic has literally some of the hardest grammar rules out of all languages. I'm talking from experience.

    • @suprecam9880
      @suprecam9880 5 лет назад +44

      Resources are pretty shite for Norwegian too. Know this from experience. At those levels, it's about the same resource wise, but yeah Icelandic is certainly tough. IMO Polish is still one of the most rekt languages to try to learn. Coming from someone who speaks intermediate Russian.. Polish is still just wtf to me.

    • @thesecretlegends6092
      @thesecretlegends6092 5 лет назад +10

      @@painxxxl look on that matter this can only be a problem for poorer languages..if let's say you take greek (1.000.000 words) to Icelandic (650.000 words) you can see that this isn't a problem at all for a greek speeker...yed they have many words for let's say the wind or the snow but as a greek learning Icelandic I have to agree that the resource pool and especially the books, oh my god the books, are shit....

    • @michaelshort2388
      @michaelshort2388 5 лет назад +36

      I'd say Icelandic is easier than Finnish, chinese, arabic, turkish, or hebrew. :)

  • @insertname1857
    @insertname1857 5 лет назад +436

    *me, an intellectual:* _begone, þ_

    • @littlesnowflakepunk855
      @littlesnowflakepunk855 4 года назад +4

      @@matthewlawton9241 english doesn't distinguish between thorn and eth.
      the closest I can find (in my accent at least) is that thorn is the "th" sound from "With," whereas eth is the "th" sound from "That."

    • @flutterwind7686
      @flutterwind7686 3 года назад

      @@littlesnowflakepunk855 I can clearly tell the sounds apart, I'm from Canada

    • @littlesnowflakepunk855
      @littlesnowflakepunk855 3 года назад

      @@flutterwind7686 i mean yeah i can distinguish between them, but it's not something we have to pay attention to in english, so speaking it is sometimes a bit weird

    • @Hiljaa_
      @Hiljaa_ 2 года назад

      Þoþ

  • @siebensunden
    @siebensunden 4 года назад +757

    Hrafna: We have a lot of comas
    Czech: Hold my pivo á, č, ď, é, ě, í, ň, ó, ř, š, ť, ú, ů, ý, ž

    • @kebabjesuper6237
      @kebabjesuper6237 4 года назад +47

      uhmm Slovensko : á, ä, č, ď,dz, dž, é, í, Ĺ, Ľ, ň, ó, ô, ŕ, š, ť, ú, ý, ž

    • @siebensunden
      @siebensunden 4 года назад +3

      @@kebabjesuper6237 Slovenčinou jsem si nebyl jistý, nechtěl jsem to dokonit. :) Co se slovenského dz týče, některé balkánské abecedy používají pro tento zvuk stejné písmeno, jako mají Islanďané pro th.

    • @eduardo1382
      @eduardo1382 4 года назад +23

      Portuguese: á, â, ã, à, é, ê, í, ó, ô, õ, ú, ç
      Compared with Czech and Slovensko it's nothing haha

    • @kebabjesuper6237
      @kebabjesuper6237 4 года назад +4

      @@eduardo1382 really? xdddd hahah no..

    • @astridamillere8283
      @astridamillere8283 4 года назад +12

      Similar with Latvian: ā, č, ē, ģ, ī, ķ, ļ, ņ, š, ū, ž, dž

  • @marcderiveau9307
    @marcderiveau9307 3 года назад +36

    One reason Icelandic is hard to learn, is that icelandic people are so polite, they never correct you. You say “shit” instead of “cake”, they even don’t smile. They don’t mock you, they are such a sweet people. Love them. ❤️

  • @tn00bz
    @tn00bz 5 лет назад +537

    "AE pronounced as it is written"
    me: oh, like ae
    "I"
    me:.....wat

    • @ghenulo
      @ghenulo 5 лет назад +8

      Yeah, more like "aj" than "ae".

    • @reineh3477
      @reineh3477 5 лет назад +3

      Yes æ is pronounced like the Swedish ä

    • @johanfagerstromjarlenfors
      @johanfagerstromjarlenfors 5 лет назад +6

      Reine H not really. The icelandic æ isn’t really like danish and norweegian æ that is like swedish ä...

    • @BS-se4yg
      @BS-se4yg 4 года назад +8

      It's like Spanish "ai"

    • @GnoweeGaming
      @GnoweeGaming 4 года назад +1

      Æ

  • @naomimonaghan730
    @naomimonaghan730 2 года назад +31

    Making time stamps because why not
    Letters not recognized in English 1:51 - 3:50
    Her reading the whole Icelandic alphabet 3:59 - 5:54
    Pronouncing each letter 6:01 - 6:22
    Basic sentences in Icelandic 7:10 - 8:27
    Btw Tysm for making this video 🤗

  • @fionawanser8771
    @fionawanser8771 3 года назад +82

    "this is one of the most difficult languages to learn" me not being able to roll my Rs 👁️👄👁️

    • @julianneheindorf5757
      @julianneheindorf5757 3 года назад +4

      Obviously, she haven’t tried Greenlandic...

    • @vaniavieira6012
      @vaniavieira6012 3 года назад +3

      @@julianneheindorf5757 it's one of the hardest not the hardest

    • @juanmarcos1145
      @juanmarcos1145 3 года назад +2

      Icelandic is in fact easy. Hard could be Hungarian or polish

    • @vaniavieira6012
      @vaniavieira6012 3 года назад +5

      @@juanmarcos1145 dude no one cares, Icelandic stills being one of the hardest this is not a competition.
      Russian, Arabic way harder than those languages that no one needs to learn but no one says that

    • @juanmarcos1145
      @juanmarcos1145 3 года назад +4

      @@vaniavieira6012 well, I commented because people in this comments section begun to talk recursively about the difficulty of Icelandic. Then it is not something that nobody cares. It is in fact the contrary : something everyone seems to be curious about. Being so, I just gave my objective opinion. It is easy.
      I never understood why people is obsessed with saying that their language is difficult, I guess it's a feeling that an easy language is for morons or something like that. But that is not the case!!!!! Language difficulty has nothing to do with their speakers intelligence, at all!!!

  • @sarah-ex9hn
    @sarah-ex9hn 6 лет назад +642

    Hey, I‘m Sarah,14 (Germany) and since 2 years my dream is to travel to Iceland 🇮🇸 ❤️ Now I started learning a little bit Icelandic and read books about Iceland. I‘m glad I found you 🤗!

    • @AK-fk3ll
      @AK-fk3ll 5 лет назад +22

      Geh nach dem Abi hin :) Ich hab das letzte halbe Jahr dort auf einer Farm gelebt und es war die beste Zeit, also just go :)

    • @hopetilia8637
      @hopetilia8637 5 лет назад +14

      hey! Mir geht's genauso! Cool zu wissen das es noch andere Leute gibt, die Island so toll finden wie ich!

    • @00celine00
      @00celine00 5 лет назад +11

      Buh dachte schon ich wär alleine mit meinem Tick auch wenn ich es irgendwie nicht gebacken bekomm die Sprache richtig zu lernen aber naja 😅

    • @hopetilia8637
      @hopetilia8637 5 лет назад +6

      Ah ja, ich kann aus eigener Erfahrung sagen, dass es echt schwierig ist eine Sprache zu lernen, wenn man keinen Lehrer hat, vor allem eine so seltene Sprache wie Isländisch. Ich empfehle dir "Reise Know-How"s Kauderwelsch Reihe, die haben auch einen Sprachenführer für Isländisch und ich komme sehr gut damit klar!

    • @Mel-ij2bs
      @Mel-ij2bs 5 лет назад +3

      Wenn ich erwachsen bin möchte ich nach Island ziehen😂

  • @incrsmathr
    @incrsmathr 5 лет назад +335

    Tbh, I decided to learn a bit of Icelandic to understand at least something in Hatari interviews😅 Thank you so much for the video!❤️

    • @b-hope6500
      @b-hope6500 5 лет назад +3

      Brooo

    • @RealGermanish
      @RealGermanish 5 лет назад +15

      that's why I'm here

    • @awinel2367
      @awinel2367 5 лет назад +1

      lol same

    • @OfficialSilverMoon
      @OfficialSilverMoon 3 года назад +1

      what's a hatari interview?

    • @incrsmathr
      @incrsmathr 3 года назад +4

      @@OfficialSilverMoon “Hatari” is an Icelandic techno-industrial band (sort of) They performed at Eurovision 2019, check them out, they’re incredible!

  • @lauravampire1276
    @lauravampire1276 5 лет назад +50

    I love how “L” is hard but “R” is easy for Spanish speakers. My mother tongue is Spanish and it’s just so fascinating how letters are written the same but pronounced so differently. Pretty cool.

    • @davidavilag.6931
      @davidavilag.6931 Год назад +2

      Si verdad? No creo que haya alguna dificultad pronunciando la "L" cierto? Suena como un "Aëtl" no lo sé jajaja

    • @alex-eucmad.7133
      @alex-eucmad.7133 Год назад

      @@davidavilag.6931ninguna dificultad con la L islandesa, tenemos palabras como atlas, chipotle o náhuatl con el mismo sonido

  • @Aang_L._Jackson
    @Aang_L._Jackson 2 года назад +7

    imagine learning this language from Scratch and being able to speak it fluently... it can't get more legendary than that

    • @kaiwai-gunnarsson7812
      @kaiwai-gunnarsson7812 Год назад

      im worried now that i know being fluent from scratch would be legendary

  • @jageenperson
    @jageenperson 5 лет назад +52

    It's so strange because I understand everything you say (I'm Swedish) but it just sounds more complicated. Very interesting!

  • @LandelRey
    @LandelRey 5 лет назад +97

    3:28 the next letter is *T H O T*

    • @hamzakhomsi
      @hamzakhomsi 4 года назад

      Haha! Thank you, because I was struggling at listening to the pronunciation :D

    • @Vanessa-if7jf
      @Vanessa-if7jf 4 года назад

      Hamza Khomsi 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @hamzakhomsi
      @hamzakhomsi 4 года назад +3

      @@Vanessa-if7jf What? 😑

    • @Vanessa-if7jf
      @Vanessa-if7jf 4 года назад

      Hamza Khomsi wym

  • @ngel001
    @ngel001 4 года назад +326

    After Netflix Eurovision song contest: Story of Fire Saga, everybody wants to speak Icelandic.

    • @luchoney5868
      @luchoney5868 4 года назад +15

      Literally me. 😂🤣😂 Damn it, you figured me out.

    • @sarahgabrielle4739
      @sarahgabrielle4739 4 года назад +10

      exactly why i’m here right now

    • @ollie8185
      @ollie8185 4 года назад +4

      So accurate lol

    • @garubymomo
      @garubymomo 4 года назад +3

      Dang busted

    • @ChescaVenice_18
      @ChescaVenice_18 4 года назад +4

      lol the movie made me curious about the language xD

  • @CelestialExility
    @CelestialExility 4 года назад +32

    normal people: yeah!
    Me, an intellectual: é

  • @ev.anflynn
    @ev.anflynn 5 лет назад +12

    My mother found me an Icelandic tutor in my town and I'm so excited to start studying Icelandic again!! (I had an online teacher 2 years ago but he stopped teaching for some reason) and I decided to watch this video to get the jist of the basics again, thank you for posting this

  • @manuelfavid9221
    @manuelfavid9221 6 лет назад +179

    Oh, yes this is perfect. I am obsessed with Scandinavian languages. I so love ( and I speak ) Norwegian and old Norwegian sound like Icelandic, right ? And yeah! Icelandic is absolutely amazing language what I so so so love

    • @heddaaaaaa1804
      @heddaaaaaa1804 6 лет назад +17

      Manuel Favid yes, old Norwegian sounds like icelandic

    • @manjensen1710
      @manjensen1710 5 лет назад +26

      Basically Icelandic and Faroese are closer to the way vikings talked, while Norwegian, Swedish and Danish have sort of "evolved".

    • @GangeHrolfr
      @GangeHrolfr 5 лет назад +24

      I'm Norwegian. Scandinavia have all lost their original language to a modern mix of German. Very few traces of Norse language left. But there is a slight mix with Old East Norse, as they spoke in Sweden and Denmark. This is just a slight mix tho, so naturally Old East Norse is extinct. In Norway in the Middle Ages, we spoke Old West Norse, and it is our language that is perserved in Iceland and the Faroe Islands. It makes me glad to see that ppl are interested in learning modern Icelandic, which hasn't changed too much since Old West Norse language :) The vast majority of ppl who settled in Iceland were from Norway. Who would have thought, that our language would only be perserved there and not in Norway proper? History is funny sometimes.

    • @heddaaaaaa1804
      @heddaaaaaa1804 5 лет назад +3

      GangeHrolfr jeg er også fra Norge jehuuuu

    • @jacobmedk367
      @jacobmedk367 5 лет назад +3

      @@GangeHrolfr Well some dialects in Norway have alot of words and sayings that are very similar, however not to Much. I can understand some icelandic(spoken that is) with the help of ny dialect

  • @jessicahakala3017
    @jessicahakala3017 2 года назад

    Thank you for making these videos!! I'm visiting Iceland later this year and am SO EXCITED to visit the most beautiful country in the world!

  • @sarayasanchez839
    @sarayasanchez839 3 года назад +25

    I’m so sad I’m half Icelandic and this year I got really interested in the language and culture and my grandma died last year😔😔 I just wanna ask her more
    Edit: oh no now I’m crying

    • @veroniquecastel9582
      @veroniquecastel9582 3 года назад +1

      Keep learning! Find like minded people and learn together. Good luck :-)

    • @haydenhayden8872
      @haydenhayden8872 3 года назад

      Find people who knew her, and ask for lessons.

  • @ashleyengland9661
    @ashleyengland9661 6 лет назад +18

    Very helpful! I found your channel while preparing for an upcoming trip to Iceland. I’m trying to learn at least how to pronounce some of the towns and sites I’m going to so I don’t completely mangle them if I get asked where I’ve been or need to ask for help during the trip. Maybe how to pronounce places around Iceland can be another video idea for this series!

  • @lau5342
    @lau5342 6 лет назад +326

    “R” is actually really easy for us Hispanic people😂💗

    • @noricx6037
      @noricx6037 5 лет назад +20

      Lauren Gelvez And Latins :))

    • @mhrau444
      @mhrau444 5 лет назад +59

      And slavic people :P

    • @Leo-uu8du
      @Leo-uu8du 5 лет назад +20

      and austrians

    • @victorhpelayo8693
      @victorhpelayo8693 5 лет назад +28

      And reptilians!

    • @Iloveotters24
      @Iloveotters24 5 лет назад +5

      Lauren Gelvez It’s the best part about being Hispanic 🤠💘!

  • @roguex9469
    @roguex9469 4 года назад +5

    I want to keep this beautiful language alive but unfortunately there aren't many ways to learn it. My best friend Aaralyn (also an Iceland native) was teaching me but she sadly passed away and now I'm on my own with learning Icelandic. Hopefully the Icelandic government manages to succeed in incorporating the language into the digital world so that computers, smartphones, artificial intelligence in devices, and text to speech can manage to keep the language for others to use as well. Hopefully the younger generations don't turn a deaf ear to their Viking roots. And thank you for teaching us viewers your native tongue, I love your content.

  • @hey-ty7yu
    @hey-ty7yu 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for making this video! I'm Icelandic myself, and we have a lot of family in Iceland, so that really kind of motivated me to want to learn the language.

  • @vintagekory
    @vintagekory 5 лет назад +15

    Thanks for this video!!!! My mom's side of the family is Icelandic, I only know a cuss word and a few other things. Everytime I see my aunt she asks me if I've learned any Icelandic. I'm going to watch and practice every video. Next time I see her, I'll be ready. Thanks so much from USA.

  • @Lucy-yo3tk
    @Lucy-yo3tk 6 лет назад +3

    So glad for a new video! Love your work...💙

  • @crazyvikingphotography7464
    @crazyvikingphotography7464 Год назад

    Oh my gosh, takk so much for doing this video! Helping us to pronounce the letters is super helpful. I can't wait to watch the rest of your videos :)

  • @AlexejCeros
    @AlexejCeros 3 года назад

    Thank you so much! I just came here from your Norse Mythology names videos, and I’m loving your content. 🥰❤️

  • @inercia7107
    @inercia7107 6 лет назад +353

    the spanish R is stronger than the icelandic one! but your L is definitely impossible for me to pronunce...

  • @tubekulose
    @tubekulose 5 лет назад +15

    I'm fortunately from Austria. So I speak one of the most complex languages in the world (German). I also speak five more languages. Hence I had no troubles to memorize and pronounce the letters you presented. :-) And I really love your Icelandic accent, when you're talking English! By the way, the thing above te vowels is also called "accent" and not "comma". :-) Thanks for the lesson and best regards from Vienna!

    • @KarmaKraftttt
      @KarmaKraftttt Год назад +2

      German is so difficult language that even German themselves don't understand 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @norberttischler8829
      @norberttischler8829 Год назад +4

      it's funny how only the native German speakers are so convinced that their language is so complex

    • @johnrosa4945
      @johnrosa4945 10 месяцев назад

      This has to be the most modest comment I've come across on RUclips, lol..

  • @littlemix6207
    @littlemix6207 4 года назад +9

    I used to live in Iceland, the language I miss so much.

  • @adopan75
    @adopan75 4 года назад

    I love it! Wife and I are going to start learning. I hope you continue teaching the language.

  • @KLICKTmichAN
    @KLICKTmichAN 5 лет назад +95

    Dankeschön für dieses Tutorial bitte mehr davon! 🖐🏻 Grüße aus Deutschland 🇩🇪

    • @gpj6321
      @gpj6321 5 лет назад +2

      Dankie vir die lesse ....... Groete uit Suid Afrika. Almost the same. I couldn't get " bitte mehr davon"

    • @superanson7
      @superanson7 5 лет назад +1

      Defcon bitte mehr davon= more videos of this

    • @gpj6321
      @gpj6321 5 лет назад +1

      @@superanson7 Baie meer daarvan.

    • @superanson7
      @superanson7 5 лет назад +1

      Defcon i mean in this context but dankie

    • @Rozwarty
      @Rozwarty 4 года назад +2

      @@gpj6321 a bit late to the party, but;
      Tusen takk for denne opplæringen. Vær så snill, flere videoer av dette. Hilsener fra Norge.
      It's amazing, how Afrikaans and German are different subgroups of the Germanic languages than Norwegian is, but their grammar is incredibly similar still.
      Then there's English, which barely has any Germanic features left.

  • @autumnleidi8074
    @autumnleidi8074 5 лет назад +82

    I wish you could be slower when it comes to pronouncing the sentences. It's really hard for me to catch up. 😅
    But thank you so much for teaching us. 🙏😍

    • @boldisordorin9010
      @boldisordorin9010 2 года назад +5

      You can set the video speed lower in the settings of the video

  • @roxannesigurdsson2218
    @roxannesigurdsson2218 2 года назад

    Thank you for making these videos. My dad was for Iceland and he moved to Canada at the age of 4. A side from good morning and good night, Amma and Afi we didn't t learn much Icelandic. 2 years ago both my Dad and Afi past away and now I feel it is even more important to learn Icelandic. My kids are loving it and your video makes it little more fun.
    Thank you. When I learn to write thank you in Icelandic I will add it.

  • @kathleenblyde3211
    @kathleenblyde3211 4 года назад

    Thank you for making these videos! I have been wanting to learn Icelandic for a while, and these videos are so helpful. Thank you- Cheers from Canada

  • @kenmasters5384
    @kenmasters5384 2 года назад +3

    Iceland is very Beautiful place. I am interested in this country. They are a small people, but they love and pride their culture, language, history. Respect! ❤❤❤ Hello from Kazakhstan!

  • @eviebush7866
    @eviebush7866 5 лет назад +4

    I’m coming to Iceland with my school tomorrow, I’m really excited to see the amazing sights. From the uk🇬🇧💗

  • @albin998
    @albin998 3 года назад +7

    I'm swedish and i always thought icelandic had almost nothing in common with swedish, but hearing this i see lots of similarities! More so the sound than the spelling though

  • @girlovecupcake
    @girlovecupcake 4 года назад

    So glad to see this even if it's a year after! A long time ago I tried to learn Icelandic, but there weren't really any videos at the time to help. :(( It's one of the hardest languages to learn, but thank you for this! The only other RUclipsr I know who is Icelandic is an ASMRtist.

  • @yeehaw6229
    @yeehaw6229 6 лет назад +10

    The letters with commas (á é í ó ú) sounds quite similar to how you pronounce them in Irish which is super helpful, and so far it seems easy to catch on to the alphabet 😊 i love learning new languages so this is on my list!

  • @user-km7kr3ct8t
    @user-km7kr3ct8t 6 лет назад +65

    I am from Greece and here we have 40°C+ ... Come one day for your summer holidays .. Our islands are awesome and picturesque

    • @pavlinatz
      @pavlinatz 6 лет назад +7

      We don't liar lol

    • @user-qp9pp5zi8u
      @user-qp9pp5zi8u 5 лет назад +2

      I love the culture of Greece and I also want to travel Greece.

    • @alig.20
      @alig.20 5 лет назад +5

      Well okay bu why do you mention it here?

    • @buddyboycandy
      @buddyboycandy 5 лет назад +1

      Σταυρος Ιωαννης Μπλατσιωτης I'm Greek and Iceland hellena

    • @johnreed9050
      @johnreed9050 5 лет назад

      I've been to Crete Rhodes and Corfu

  • @socialreform5420
    @socialreform5420 4 года назад

    Subscribed because I am hoping to visit Iceland in 2020 and I think it is VERY important to learn some words from the nation one is visiting! Thanks for making this video series - starting at part 1!

  • @annahailliebrown7041
    @annahailliebrown7041 Год назад

    Oh my goodness graciousness, I ADORE you! You’re so sweet and kind, and that’s not something I see much!
    I wanted to learn Icelandic because my favorite coach was from there, but recently I watched Eurovision (of all the stupid things) and fell back in love.

  • @alinachelaru6235
    @alinachelaru6235 6 лет назад +140

    Icelandic is harder than I imagined but it sounds so fun X) btw youre a great Icelandic teacher

    • @manjensen1710
      @manjensen1710 5 лет назад +5

      You should try with Hungarian and Finnish, those are very hard too.

    • @MuffinologyTrainer
      @MuffinologyTrainer 5 лет назад

      Incoming bilete catre islanda.

    • @sebisuteu8979
      @sebisuteu8979 5 лет назад

      @@manjensen1710 i live in Transylvania,i have some hungarians Friends and hungarian is not that dificult, icelandic is a way harder

    • @elliotberg4572
      @elliotberg4572 5 лет назад

      @Ivan funny how you said German, Norwegian, Swedish and "Dansk". Are you Danish?

    • @elliotberg4572
      @elliotberg4572 5 лет назад

      @Ivan you seem like you spell fine.

  • @Lewisiaisoutofcontext
    @Lewisiaisoutofcontext 6 лет назад +44

    Aaahh I'm so happy you made this! I'm Swedish and as a part of high school Swedish class, you get to practice reading and understanding Norwegian, Danish and Icelandic and well, I fell in love with the Icelandic and I've been learning it by myself (slowly but surely) ever since. It really helps to be Swedish because some words are very similar or identical to the Swedish ones so I can sort of understand like 35% of what is being said... but I've got to learn the remaining 65% haha. Takk fyrir myndskeiðið, Hrafnhildur!! Þú ert frábær! Ég hlakka til næsta.

    • @ClaudiaYousef
      @ClaudiaYousef 6 лет назад +4

      Hoppas du lär dig isländska utantill :)
      Lycka till!

    • @Lewisiaisoutofcontext
      @Lewisiaisoutofcontext 6 лет назад +1

      @@ClaudiaYousef Det hoppas jag med. Tack! ☺

    • @Christina-fr9bu
      @Christina-fr9bu 5 лет назад

      Lakhja vad kul! Min pappa är från island och han lärde aldrig mig så jag måste lära mig själv:( men det går hyfsat bra

    • @heavyloadmachine
      @heavyloadmachine 5 лет назад +2

      A random comment, but it amuses me how freaking different Finnish is from all the other Nordic languages 😂 it’s like from an entirely different universe! Anyway, this video was the first time I heard Icelandic and I could definitely hear some distant similarities with Swedish. In Finland, it is compulsory for us to study Swedish as it is our other official language :)

    • @elliotberg4572
      @elliotberg4572 5 лет назад

      @@heavyloadmachine The baltic languages are on their own

  • @leighfoster7429
    @leighfoster7429 2 года назад +1

    Such a beautiful language!!!!! It’s one of my top most beautiful languages I have ever heard!!!!! You did a great job!!!!!

  • @djAstraim
    @djAstraim 3 года назад +1

    I love the amount of "s" Icelanders add when talking in english. Is sooooo sweet ❤️

  • @accuratebalance5097
    @accuratebalance5097 4 года назад +84

    Languages: Let's ditch all these obscure phnemes and only leave one or two for the others to be confused about.
    English: Yeah I'll go for the th. I just love this hissing baby.
    Chinese: Then I take q and x, biting my own tongue is best.
    Spanish and so on: Get an aveolar trill me. Showing off I like!
    German and some others: I suppose, that you guys would, if take I the ch, complain, not, bitte?
    Icelandic: Ðe rest of ðese nice vowels and consonants take I, then.

    • @alkfouq8762
      @alkfouq8762 3 года назад +3

      *ðen

    • @WarriorofSunlight
      @WarriorofSunlight 3 года назад +8

      The trilled R is the way the R is pronounced in most languages. It’s the English R that’s extremely rare.

    • @accuratebalance5097
      @accuratebalance5097 3 года назад +1

      @@WarriorofSunlight Yeah, it kinda slipped my mind when I typed that.

  • @konigsopfer
    @konigsopfer 5 лет назад +17

    Thanks, this is pretty useful. BTW we in spanish (i'm from Mexico) we have a very similar "r" sound as yours like in the spanish word "urna" its kind of a soft vibrating r. Also here in Mexico we have this language called "nahuatl" which was the language from the Aztec empire. In this language the letters "tl", which appear in a lot of nahuaTL words, are pronounced exactly as your L, like exhaling with your tongue on top of your mouth. So, your letter L for me is like "etl" (with the sound I explained above). Keep on goind with the videos :)

    • @egd5588
      @egd5588 4 года назад

      Jonathan Galván i was thinking the same thing regarding the TL sound.
      Xóchitl- it’s a common word in Mexico, and it has that very ending.

    • @riccardolongo8479
      @riccardolongo8479 4 года назад

      Jonathan Galván I think she was talking about the Castillian Spanish, the one form Spain cause they don’t have the Nahuatl dialect since it comes form native Mexicans

    • @alex-eucmad.7133
      @alex-eucmad.7133 Год назад

      @@riccardolongo8479de todos modos muchas palabras del Nahuatl han pasado al español, y además tenemos otras con TL como atlas, atlántico, pentatlón, atlético, triatlón, atlante, etc

  • @giftmoyo5892
    @giftmoyo5892 3 года назад

    Hi Hrafna. I've just bumbed into your videos and just want to thank you for teaching icelandic on your chanel.

  • @789quicky
    @789quicky 3 года назад

    Love Iceland and your accent. I hope I can revisit again soon! Great lesson on the language !

  • @octo_berries4342
    @octo_berries4342 5 лет назад +12

    Icelandic with the "rrrr" sounds perfect for ASMR

  • @ihorternopilskyi6895
    @ihorternopilskyi6895 5 лет назад +18

    7:57 "I'm getting pretty good at this" 😂

  • @ridgedk9co179
    @ridgedk9co179 2 года назад

    Thanks for the video series, and you are the first video that show up. As well as the prettiest

  • @GH-cy6fh
    @GH-cy6fh 4 года назад

    Girl...you're a natural for teaching languages. Excellent job.

  • @vikingpotet
    @vikingpotet 4 года назад +7

    Im going to iceland this week and im so exited! I thought IT would be fun to learn some icelandic! Its not so hard for me tho...Im Norwegian. 🇳🇴💙🇮🇸

  • @deboracolman2646
    @deboracolman2646 5 лет назад +3

    I’m from Brazil and this is so freaking hard for me to pronounce. I speak Portuguese, which is my mother tongue, English and I’ve been learning Spanish. I’m so in love with languages and their peculiarities

  • @dennismartin7318
    @dennismartin7318 5 лет назад

    I love listening to you speak Icelandic. It sounds like such a robust language.

  • @brianleben4893
    @brianleben4893 2 года назад

    Than you immensely for putting this out. You are gorgeous and smart and obviously very proud and knowledgeable about your great history. Thank you!!

  • @suparauta8026
    @suparauta8026 6 лет назад +5

    Can you tell us in some video words what sounds almost the same but meaning is different?

  • @11lvr11
    @11lvr11 5 лет назад +6

    Thank you so much,now i know at least a bit about the pronunciation^^
    Tusen takk!

  • @sabrinaoliveira2965
    @sabrinaoliveira2965 5 лет назад

    Omg I Just found your channel randomly and I wish I had found about It last year cause my class did an assignment/ party about Iceland. We did a huge research (and we put It all in a book format), we learned the dances and we cooked some of the food as well. Your country is amazing and insanely beautiful!
    PS. I'm from Brazil 🇧🇷

  • @chrisjones-fp5vd
    @chrisjones-fp5vd 2 года назад

    I am reading the prose edda right now and this helped so much with the names and places. Thanks so much!

  • @frejajonsson6701
    @frejajonsson6701 5 лет назад +3

    Jag älskar detta! Jag är från Sverige, so i understand a lot actually. I am trying to learn icelandic and i would love to see more videos of you teaching icelandic 😊

    • @els1f
      @els1f 5 лет назад

      Is Icelandic really that understandable when coming from Swedish? jag har fått lära mig svenska i två månad (I think that's right 😋) och jag älskar Icelandic (icelandska?). Icelandic sounds so beautiful to me.

  • @JAVIERMORALES-jw9bz
    @JAVIERMORALES-jw9bz 4 года назад +4

    In Mexico 🇲🇽 we have a dialect called “Nahuatl” and most of the cities and towns sound as the Icelandic letter “L” , so I think it’s not that hard after all. For example:
    Popocatépe”TL” Iztaccíhua”TL”

    • @davidavilag.6931
      @davidavilag.6931 Год назад +1

      Si, tienes razón, no creo que la "L" tuviera alguna dificultad de pronunciación jajajaja y sí, cuando dijo como se pronunciaba se me vino a la mente el Náhuatl

    • @alex-eucmad.7133
      @alex-eucmad.7133 Год назад

      De hecho tenemos muchas palabras en español con TL que suenan igual a la L islandesa. La mayoría vienen del Nahuatl

  • @wnorforaneo9821
    @wnorforaneo9821 4 года назад

    Backing you up all time since you say you are not a professional language teacher, you are doing it pretty well, go on with these lessons, you are becoming one of Iceland´s most known persons.

  • @micanoto7171
    @micanoto7171 3 года назад

    I'm learning Danish since I'm moving to Denmark and I see a lot of similar words or roots of words. I love it!

  •  5 лет назад +27

    Ahh Germanic languages!!!! Love them. Rabenhilde would be your name in German I guess

  • @valeriobuda7409
    @valeriobuda7409 6 лет назад +3

    Wow thank you, that's very useful, i just practiced like an odd creature in front of your video HAHAHAHA, i hope to see more of these lessons, good job!

  • @LizardsLore
    @LizardsLore 4 года назад +2

    So because of your videos I have been learning Icelandic. I’m still only in the stage of learning food words but I wanted to say THANK YOU. I’m learning from you and from Drops. They should sponsor you!!

  • @cjtuba1
    @cjtuba1 4 года назад +1

    Just discovered your video. Incredibly interesting. Please keep posting, really informative. Thanks Hrafna!

  • @abagpiperyoumetinmexico211
    @abagpiperyoumetinmexico211 5 лет назад +9

    Hello! Im from México, and in the languagh the aztecs spoke (nàhuatl) there is a sound very simillar or id say identical to the ll. so if you know a couple words in nahuatl, youll not have problem saying Eyjafjallajökull or ell. for example, water is atl, snake is coatl and its pronouded like at the right of the tongue

    • @servantofaeie1569
      @servantofaeie1569 4 года назад

      Úlff MetalBagpiper99 yea it reminded me of Nahuatl too

    • @alex-eucmad.7133
      @alex-eucmad.7133 Год назад

      And in Spanish there are words like atlas, pentatlón, atlántico, atlético... all of them with TL pronunciation

  • @SullyEyevie
    @SullyEyevie 5 лет назад +5

    love it

  • @powder_ur_lambs
    @powder_ur_lambs 3 года назад

    Planning on attending grad school in and emigrating to Iceland, great resource! You're entirely correct that there are very few resources, but anyone planning on moving already has a leg up once they enroll in language courses bc they're here!

  • @mrkesu
    @mrkesu 4 года назад

    Cool video and I'm happy to find it, thanks for making it!
    I just found this via YT search, so hopefully you've been keeping up with these and if you have, I'll be watching them all 🤩
    Honestly the alphabet reading I could not follow very well. This might be a nice point to use (or learn) some editing skills! For example, circling the letters as you are pronouncing them (it would also make it easier to find later if I needed to look it up)

  • @mikaelaulin4992
    @mikaelaulin4992 6 лет назад +11

    Thank you. You are good at this and you´re very sweet.

  • @tryggen7077
    @tryggen7077 5 лет назад +5

    Im so glad im from sweden and most of these sound similar to ours 😂 and even those that are not are pretty simple for me

    • @hnorrstrom
      @hnorrstrom 5 лет назад +1

      Yes, I'm swedish too and when she speaks really slowly I understand most of the words. But if she speaks at normal speed it's almost impossible.

  • @noirsilencieux
    @noirsilencieux 4 года назад

    Hey Hrafna! This is great...Now I can start learning your language as I plan to come back next year to your amazing country. I hope to learn at least basics ;) thanks & keep safe!

  • @jenshardecel1314
    @jenshardecel1314 3 года назад

    So very sweet of you for putting out these videos. Thank you

  • @Dakota5997
    @Dakota5997 5 лет назад +47

    I'm Russian, and Icelandic "R" sounds just like "Р" in Russian 😀
    By the way, your name's so beautiful but you pronounce it so fast I can't even hear what you're actually saying and repeat 🤣 but it's beautiful!

    • @lilsquidd1815
      @lilsquidd1815 3 года назад +4

      "P" in russian is the same than "R" in all the romance lenguages

    • @chrishoggett1375
      @chrishoggett1375 3 года назад +3

      Same as in Dutch, we really role the R too. In German om this is much less the case. With Russian I struggled most pronouncing the ‘И’. I never stressed it enough. So I was told anyway :)

    • @Dakota5997
      @Dakota5997 3 года назад

      @@chrishoggett1375 I heard that if you want to pronounce Russian "И" , you need to make a sound like someone punched you in the stomach 🤣

    • @tosauxy7207
      @tosauxy7207 3 года назад +1

      @@lilsquidd1815 Not French

    • @boldisordorin9010
      @boldisordorin9010 2 года назад +1

      @@chrishoggett1375 but "и" is just "i" from romanic languages

  • @user-sx7fu5ir2f
    @user-sx7fu5ir2f 5 лет назад +6

    Can't help but think about bjork when you speak

  • @joshuababcock589
    @joshuababcock589 4 года назад

    Honestly a great video. I have tons of notes from this. I have just started learning recently and I feel like ð has 1000 pronunciations and I needed help to clear it up. Now I have a whole page of notes to help. Thanks!! Mjög gott!!

  • @Erik101
    @Erik101 2 месяца назад +1

    I remember the lady in Wax museum in Reykjavik explained me these basics so nicely with patience ;)
    I remember her so well, if I would be in Iceland I would visit this place again to see her again 😊 This video reminded me this moment ❤

  • @sofiiare
    @sofiiare 5 лет назад +7

    In italy the R have the same sound like your

  • @user-km7kr3ct8t
    @user-km7kr3ct8t 6 лет назад +6

    You are perfect .. Icelandic is a very difficult language ... BTW my Icelandic accent sucks

  • @rickpowell1402
    @rickpowell1402 5 лет назад +1

    I'm in Iceland now, no clue on the language but everyone is super nice and they speak English. One of my favorite places so far. except for the fact that it never gets dark.

  • @kmds0412
    @kmds0412 4 года назад

    I have found your chanel searching about learn icelandic, and first your english is cute, second omg how can I learn this language sounds and look difficult, but the pronunciation is so beautiful!!! ❤ thank you for your help! Sending kisses from Brazil 😘💖

  • @HansMartinHammer
    @HansMartinHammer 5 лет назад +9

    I´m from the Faroe Islands (Færeyjar) and Norway, and I lived in Iceland for five years. Considering my native languages are the closest relatives to Icelandic, Faroese being extremely similar (mostly in written form though), I still struggled with Icelandic. My Icelandic didn´t "flourish" until my fourth year in Iceland. I still have trouble with the language, but I can understand just about everything in Icelandic.
    I did notice in the video you didn´t mention the diphthong "au", even though it´s basically not a single letter, it should be counted as one. In the Faroese alphabet the diphthongs "ei", "ey", and "oy" are not only counted as diphthongs, but also as their own letters.

    • @Easineva
      @Easineva 5 лет назад +1

      Hans Martin Hammer heh I’m also from the Faroe Islands and am half Faroese and Icelandic:)) It’s not often I see Faroese people here:D

    • @HansMartinHammer
      @HansMartinHammer 5 лет назад

      Well, there are only about 70.000 of us in the world.

    • @sammumoo8186
      @sammumoo8186 5 лет назад

      Faroese ! I have a friend from there. I absolutely love your country, language and culture. Will visit you sometime.

    • @scrotube
      @scrotube 5 лет назад

      I spent a week in the Faroes, 3 years ago. It was a fantastic vacation. Taking the helicopter to Suduroy was fun and I found everyone to be very welcoming. I got to see the first Faroese flag and had some pilot whale. I hope to return to your country some day and visit all of the islands.

  • @reginawilliams5706
    @reginawilliams5706 5 лет назад +5

    Björk sent me here 🤗 and also how big is an influence is Björk on Iceland.

  • @VCRFI
    @VCRFI 2 месяца назад

    Thanks a lot!!! Omg it's so helpful. I just discovered your RUclips channel and I think I'll learn with you 🥰🥰

  • @shittyshit6233
    @shittyshit6233 3 года назад

    Thanks for teaching me Icelandic, youre a very good teacher, i wish i was an icelander like you, but greetings to you from Lithuania!

  • @c4tlovr
    @c4tlovr 6 лет назад +253

    Afh er ég að horfa á þetta þegar ég er íslensk😂

    • @margret6188
      @margret6188 6 лет назад +10

      Ég lika hahah

    • @c4tlovr
      @c4tlovr 6 лет назад +3

      @María Lind Bjarnadóttir OML nú veit ég um 4 ARMY hérna á íslandi og segji það sama IDOL er besta lag í heimi

    • @c4tlovr
      @c4tlovr 6 лет назад

      @María Lind Bjarnadóttir vá mig langar líka á tónleikana 😭😭😭

    • @rebekka.2342
      @rebekka.2342 6 лет назад +7

      Hahaha same lol

    • @Pauline-on3wc
      @Pauline-on3wc 6 лет назад +2

      Same...

  • @lucieni
    @lucieni 6 лет назад +10

    If anyone wants clarification on alphabet pronunciation there is a brilliant video on RUclips by Dr Jackson Crawford (Basic pronunciation of modern Icelandic) ruclips.net/video/pL5hLTEdeJw/видео.html that I have found invaluable! (From a native English speakers point of view) This is absolutely not to detract from your video Hrafnhildur, just to hopefully add a little something to help people understand where you’re coming from in that Icelandic is such a uniquely difficult to learn yet beautiful language. Love the fact the first part of your name in English is Raven.x

  • @Jjk1a3Tb
    @Jjk1a3Tb Год назад

    Takk for this. It's so hard to find good resources for learning Icelandic. Thank you for your videos.

  • @cigh7445
    @cigh7445 4 года назад

    I love the pride Icelandic people have in their language. Retaining all those old features and recognising the importance of phonetics.
    I went to Ireland to learn Irish and I was so disappointed that people just used all English sounds in all the words. Nothing like the audio I had used as learning material before going.