Tusen takk! You also say "I" in the dialects up south in Germany (Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria), and English also uses "I", although it's pronounced differently. Originally it was pronounced as Julian does in his dialect. I also read that, relative to the total size of the country, only a very small part of Norway (including Oslo) actually says "kommer". The rest says something like "kjæm". --17.8.2023
Jeg er fra USA, ikke Norge (Bokmål) Eg er frå USA, ikkje Noreg (Nynorsk) Eg e fra USA, ikkje Norge (Bergensk) Jæ er fra USA, ikkje Norge (Tromsø) Æ e fra USA, itj Norge (Trøndersk) Yes I am an american who is fascinated & studies the linguistic history of the Norwegian language. I enjoy the beautiful dialects including the two "offical" main writing systems (Bokmål/Nynorsk). I love learning about your country and the beautiful landscape. I love learning about the people and traditions. I love that your country is self sufficient! My adoration & respect! Your american friend
@@dan74695 Tusen takk min venn. There truly is so many variations of all the 4 main dialect regions. Nordnorsk, Trøndersk, Vestlandsk & Østnorsk it's hard to know them all but makes it that more interesting :)
In our online courses we cover all different Norwegian dialects with videos, audios and texts! B2+C1: speaknorskonline.teachable.com/p/b2-c1-level-online-course-package C1 package (C1.1 and C1.2): speaknorskonline.teachable.com/p/c1-level-online-course-c1-1-c1-2
Tusen takk!
You also say "I" in the dialects up south in Germany (Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria), and English also uses "I", although it's pronounced differently. Originally it was pronounced as Julian does in his dialect.
I also read that, relative to the total size of the country, only a very small part of Norway (including Oslo) actually says "kommer". The rest says something like "kjæm".
--17.8.2023
Jeg er fra USA, ikke Norge (Bokmål)
Eg er frå USA, ikkje Noreg (Nynorsk)
Eg e fra USA, ikkje Norge (Bergensk)
Jæ er fra USA, ikkje Norge (Tromsø)
Æ e fra USA, itj Norge (Trøndersk)
Yes I am an american who is fascinated & studies the linguistic history of the Norwegian language. I enjoy the beautiful dialects including the two "offical" main writing systems (Bokmål/Nynorsk). I love learning about your country and the beautiful landscape. I love learning about the people and traditions. I love that your country is self sufficient! My adoration & respect! Your american friend
I Tromsø sier de "æ". Vi sier det her i Narvik også. "Æ e fra Norge, ikke USA." blir det på narvikdialekt.
"Eg æ frå Nòrik, inkji USA." på vallemål.
@@dan74695 Tusen takk min venn. There truly is so many variations of all the 4 main dialect regions. Nordnorsk, Trøndersk, Vestlandsk & Østnorsk it's hard to know them all but makes it that more interesting :)
@@dan74695 "Eg æ frå Nòrik inkji USA" is so awesome! Thank you for sharing this
@@joespina8550 Vallemål has its own website, by the way
Jeg liker virkelig hvordan du ikke legger til engelske undertekster, det gjør mer innsats for å forstå, og det er bedre, tussen takk ♥️
In our online courses we cover all different Norwegian dialects with videos, audios and texts!
B2+C1: speaknorskonline.teachable.com/p/b2-c1-level-online-course-package
C1 package (C1.1 and C1.2): speaknorskonline.teachable.com/p/c1-level-online-course-c1-1-c1-2
Jeg liker også ingen undertekster. Jeg håper å flytte til besteforelderene mine en dag.
Storbritannia hilser Norge! Veldig bra video. Jeg er interessert i norske dialekter. Lykke til videre. :-)
Tusen hjertelig takk👏👏👏
Jeg elsker Trøndersk, Tromsø og Bergensk dialekter
Har du hørt narvikdialækta?
tusen takk
Likte denne videoen!
Τι φάση!
Gibt es keine gesunde Männer, die solche Fragen beantworten können?