My favorite word in Swedish is "Gift" because it means either "married" or "poison", same pronunciation and everything. Whoever decided that was onto something
The one I always fell for was the word Mask. It either means, like in english, a face mask or a worm. So saying go get the mask in swedish might mean that you want someone to go out and dig up a earth worm while you in reality want a face mask for your beauty regiment.
@@MajorGore and then you have "maskar" which either means "worms" or doing something intentionally slow for instance, if a football player takes extra long time to do a throw in or something you can say "han maskar" which basically means "he's intentionally wasting time" (that's a bit of slang though)
The "sex" thing can lead to funny sentences with double meanings sometimes. I was at a school trip once and we were riding in multiple vans to get there. The teacher said "Det blir sex i varje bil" which for her meant "there will be six in every car", but obviously us the tweens heard it differently and laughter ensued.
Or when our teacher was splitting us into groups, "grupp ett, grupp två... grupp sex, och grupp sju" And one of the guys who happened to end up in group 6 is like "gruppsex?".
Another fun one like that (more relevant with keyboards). The word "kul" means "fun", the word "kuk" means "dick". So saying "Jag hoppas att du får kul ikväll" means "I hope you'll have fun tonight" but if you type it on a keyboard and accidentally type a "K" instead of the "L". All of a sudden you'll be saying "I hope you'll get some d*ck tonight"
Finnish is so diffrent. As a swede you can understand all nordic speaking languages (danish and norwegian)...but forget about finnish. Like trying to read hieroglyphics without a rosetta stone. Why is that when we are neighbors?
Fun fact: Swedish and Finnish are not related, as the former is more closely related to English and German while the latter is closer to Sami and Meänkieli.
Hahaha! Good one! I don't speak [EDIT:] FINNISH, although I have a half-brother who is (half-)Finnish and also have a lot of friends who have Finnish ancestry...and, if I'm not wrong - it at least seems as if the 'Finnish rules of pronunciation' (if you know what I mean) is quite straightforward. (For ex: the double vocal spelling for long vocals - and single for short ones...or, am I right? That was unfortunately the thing I came to think of off the top of my head right now.)
pretty sure the reason he says american and not english is because there are differences between american english and british english, this is something we learn in school in sweden. (Like rubber is most commonly used for condom in american english but eraser in british english. There are spelling differences too like color and colour and you can pronounce things differently.) when we learn english we have to practice vocabulary for british english and american english, then it might depend on what english books we have and which english our teacher speaks that decide if we get more practice with the american version or the british version. Its not uncommon for swedes to write and speak a mixed version of american and british english, but those who mostly speaks with americans (online or offline) will most likely adapt more to the american version and the same for those who speaks more to british people, some people also switch between the two depending on who they speak with. The tv shows we watch also have an influence ofcourse.
I remember vividly when I got a wrong answer in school because I put elevator instead of lift for the word hiss in English class. For some reason it really stuck with me.
@@johananas8407 Yeah my friend spent like half his childhood in America and he has relatives there but our teacher taught us british english so he got shit grades💀
Never mind to learn Swedish it’s a waste of time. Because when you come to Sweden every Swede will speak English with you. And that is not because we are polite, it’s just that we take every chance we get to practice our English. I have American friend that is really frustrated over this because after years in Sweden they can’t speak a word of Swedish but our English is getting better and better 😂😂😂
Reminds me of when I was chatting with some girls at a bar and despite having lived in Sweden since childhood when they learned I wasnt born in Sweden they asked if I was good at english and from then on it was english only to practice after I answered positively.
Men borde inte FUCK YOU översättas till knulla dig? Det är direkt översätt då. Fan ta dig är ju en helt annan typ av svordom och låter mycket mildare än den förra.
The first time I visit Sweden ..i laughed so much at the road signs.. Fartkontrol=Speed control, Infart, utfart =entrance and exit..I have lived in Sweden almost five years, went to swedish school and my swedish is still below average ..
@@BerishStarr Egentligen inte, eftersom han härmade killen på videon. Att killen på filmen råkade tala sveamål (det som förr kallades rikssvenska) är en annan sak.
I can recommend that you watch Hipp Hipp Swedish for beginners (Hipp Hipp svenska för nybörjare). It's from two Swedish comedians and it's very funny and the pronunciation of the words is the best thing about the whole thing.
Coming from a swede here, his pronunciation is absolute perfect!!! Especially of ”Ö” was REALLY GOOD! Not many people get it the first timr, I was shocked!!! Bra jobbat!! (Means good job!)🎉
Best example I like to use for weird plural nouns is "stång" (rod) -> "stänger" (rods). Stänger is not only completely different from the original singular form but can also be confused with the verb "closing" which is also "stänger"
I'd recommend a book for learning Swedish, the one I used was called "Alfred" (I couldn't find it in internet searches, though) and had a simple story to follow along and many, many exercises and explanations. And after that I went to Sweden, into school and started learning further by using the language. And although a Swede would probably still immediately hear that I come from Germany I have become pretty fluent in Swedish.
3:11 I got a strong electric shock from a metal door handle yesterday and then shouted "Jävla!". My sports teacher heard that and asked what was up (he just saw me jolt back from the door and swear) and I told him that it had zapped me, then we both laughed at it and went on our way.
1:05 Bro, you've said it better than most people I've heard say it. Good job. He probably put that in the video because most people seem completely unable to say them properly.
I think you really nailed the pronunciation of Å, Ä, Ö. Well done. Since I was a big fan of Father Ted, I tend to borrow the word feck instead, when needed ;)
I am from Sweden and you pronounced "ö" really well! Same with "händer/händerna"😍 You are right about the word "helvete", but another word we have for shit is "fan"! It's pronounced with a long a, it's sounds like "faaan" Swedish is a really difficult language, but you did great!!!
I don´t know what it is about you. Even though I might have seen a react-video on another channel...if you do a react-video on the exact same I have to see it because you are so likable :) Keep it up!
There, their, they're - you maybe ”just know” but most US English speakers confuse those all the time. For some strange reason many non-native speakers, such as myself, get it right almost every time.
Your way of pronouncing å, ä and ö is excellent! I had a friend from Italy who moved to Sweden and he thought that everyone here said "För i helvete" continuously. We might do that, i dont know, it kind of means ”what a hell!”. A funny thing in Sweden is that we say "nä” to like everything. ”Nä” can mean no, ”nä?” can mean "what?", ”nää” can also mean (when we say it slowly) that we are hesitant. We also often use the word ”nä” when we actually mean the opposite, when we are being sarcastic..
You for real sounded Swedish when you said the letter "Ö"!! That surprised me. Also, that guy is teaching you how to speak with a Stockholm dialect fyi
I could not agree more with you on the issue about american language... ENGLISH is the language... PERIOD!!! I'm swedish but I hate when people make english to an american thing. I heard one american woman say that she was on a site on internet and wanted to chose her language and desperately trying to find the american flag 😅
Why we say "american" to english language is usually due to us meaning the USA "version" of english rather than the UK "version". Finished the video now, it was great. I love your attitude! (earned a new subscriber)
I'm a huge lover of expressions, because there are some like "it is what it is" (a supressing phrase to just accept a situation, even if it's wrong) that exists in every language, and phrases that are unique to each language. Between English and Swedish, each language have words that don't exist in the other and trying to think around them is a chore XD The funniest one is that "kitten" as a word doesn't exist in Swedish. We say cat-child.
Your long Ö is flawless. I wanted to tell you that before you asked for feedback. Å and Ä you might want to say in different parts of Sweden, if you wanna follow dialect ;)
Swedish and english are much closer than the might appear when you hear them spoken. Vast amounts of words are the same or similar, often it's just the stress and pronounciation that differs.
@@rasmuslernevall6938 Yes, and Old Norse and Old English also mixed heavily starting under the Danelaw in the 800s AD, especially before the Norman invasion in 1066. But it's also because the "north" and "west" germanic branches were much closer in the 400s AD, when Jutes (proto Danes), Angles (proto Danes too) and Saxons (proto North Germans) took their language, Anglish (English), to the british isles.
Heya Dwayne, always so funny to see your reaction videos 😁 I'm from Sweden so this is extra funny to me. Also, great to see you thinking for yourself and being critical in your other videos with more controversial topics 😊
As a Swedish person I have never seen an American/an eng person learn Swedish. Ur a gigachad for learning Swedish so fast, faster than my mom's brothers Arabic wife🗿
I am swedish.your accent was really on point.l am Swedish and when you mimicked him was perfectly on par, says this swede.you sounded Swedish.if you lived here l bet you would do great, if you sound that polished.👍
Love these videos you make, so fun to watch you learn and speak Swedish. I think your pronunciation is.. probably the best of everyone I've heard trying it so far, that is not a Swede. Of course, not all Swedes are "good" at it either - especially if you are one of those who dislike other "dialects", not sure of the word in English. But dialects are different depending on which part of Sweden you talk to. Much like the UK and the USA of course. Keep making these fun videos! ❤
It´s like ANY other country, showing that you have taken the time to learn some of the language(even if it´s FAR from perfect) is always apreciated:). Plus it´s a good ice breaker, belive it or not we know how hard Swedish can be to someone from another country😅. You are doing really good btw, sounding better than some people that have lived here for years.
The lucky part is that we speak pretty good English here but I think you as an English person speaking Swedish would be an awesome ice breaker because we are such a small country so that when people take an interest in our language we love to try and help or give funny examples of Swedish. Either way, if you speak Swedish or no, I think you'll have an amazing time here and I hope you do when you get here. Cheers, man!
My favorite word in Swedish is "Gift" because it means either "married" or "poison", same pronunciation and everything. Whoever decided that was onto something
Same here, I love that word.
The one I always fell for was the word Mask. It either means, like in english, a face mask or a worm. So saying go get the mask in swedish might mean that you want someone to go out and dig up a earth worm while you in reality want a face mask for your beauty regiment.
@@MajorGore and then you have "maskar" which either means "worms" or doing something intentionally slow for instance, if a football player takes extra long time to do a throw in or something you can say "han maskar" which basically means "he's intentionally wasting time" (that's a bit of slang though)
Yes
first marriage and then poison
Dude, as a Swede, I was genuinely super impressed by how seamless your pronunciation is on a lot of the words!
Aw thank you ha! I tried
@@dwaynesview yeah perfect pronuciation
Wow I'm impressed how you manage to pick up Å Ä Ö that well. Nicley done
ikr
Ikr
Absolutely.
the l was perfect
ikr
Did you know that "Å" and "Ö" are also words in Swedish? "Å" means a" small river" and "Ö" means "island".
å i åa ä e ö
E kômmer te e å, å i åa ä e ö. Klassiker!
@@johankaewberg8162this makes no sense, I am swedish
@@johankaewberg8162 Snälla förklara vad detta betyder, jag fattar inget.
@@johankaewberg8162De kommer till en å, och i ån är det en ö?
I think your Å Ä and Ö sounded very good.
Especially for English speaker. Usually they get confused so easily. I've heard "oo, ayy, yyo" way too many times.
I agree !
Yeah totally
⅚⁶⅞⁰⁸⅞
very good condition
The "sex" thing can lead to funny sentences with double meanings sometimes.
I was at a school trip once and we were riding in multiple vans to get there. The teacher said "Det blir sex i varje bil" which for her meant "there will be six in every car", but obviously us the tweens heard it differently and laughter ensued.
Or when our teacher was splitting us into groups, "grupp ett, grupp två... grupp sex, och grupp sju" And one of the guys who happened to end up in group 6 is like "gruppsex?".
@@Alfred.Petersson THIS. Every time :D
We have all had that ONE classmate.
thank god I didn’t know THIS when I was 6 years old
Another fun one like that (more relevant with keyboards). The word "kul" means "fun", the word "kuk" means "dick". So saying "Jag hoppas att du får kul ikväll" means "I hope you'll have fun tonight" but if you type it on a keyboard and accidentally type a "K" instead of the "L". All of a sudden you'll be saying "I hope you'll get some d*ck tonight"
@@spaceguy20_12 sadly all my freinds did
Your pronunciation of Å, Ä, Ö was actually pretty great! Your second try was pretty much perfect! Impressive!
Your å, ä and ö are phenomenal
"Swedish is so hard!"
*laughs in Finnish*
Finnish is so diffrent. As a swede you can understand all nordic speaking languages (danish and norwegian)...but forget about finnish. Like trying to read hieroglyphics without a rosetta stone. Why is that when we are neighbors?
Fun fact: Swedish and Finnish are not related, as the former is more closely related to English and German while the latter is closer to Sami and Meänkieli.
coughs in Greek
Hahaha! Good one! I don't speak [EDIT:] FINNISH, although I have a half-brother who is (half-)Finnish and also have a lot of friends who have Finnish ancestry...and, if I'm not wrong - it at least seems as if the 'Finnish rules of pronunciation' (if you know what I mean) is quite straightforward.
(For ex: the double vocal spelling for long vocals - and single for short ones...or, am I right? That was unfortunately the thing I came to think of off the top of my head right now.)
*Laughs in Hungarian*
Your stol is our pall.
and their "stool" is our "avföring"
pretty sure the reason he says american and not english is because there are differences between american english and british english, this is something we learn in school in sweden. (Like rubber is most commonly used for condom in american english but eraser in british english. There are spelling differences too like color and colour and you can pronounce things differently.) when we learn english we have to practice vocabulary for british english and american english, then it might depend on what english books we have and which english our teacher speaks that decide if we get more practice with the american version or the british version. Its not uncommon for swedes to write and speak a mixed version of american and british english, but those who mostly speaks with americans (online or offline) will most likely adapt more to the american version and the same for those who speaks more to british people, some people also switch between the two depending on who they speak with. The tv shows we watch also have an influence ofcourse.
I remember vividly when I got a wrong answer in school because I put elevator instead of lift for the word hiss in English class. For some reason it really stuck with me.
Or because every non-American english speaker knows American english, but Americans only know American english.
@@johananas8407 Yeah my friend spent like half his childhood in America and he has relatives there but our teacher taught us british english so he got shit grades💀
Never mind to learn Swedish it’s a waste of time. Because when you come to Sweden every Swede will speak English with you. And that is not because we are polite, it’s just that we take every chance we get to practice our English.
I have American friend that is really frustrated over this because after years in Sweden they can’t speak a word of Swedish but our English is getting better and better 😂😂😂
Reminds me of when I was chatting with some girls at a bar and despite having lived in Sweden since childhood when they learned I wasnt born in Sweden they asked if I was good at english and from then on it was english only to practice after I answered positively.
Most works requires swedish so is not easy to find works just requiring english and/or spanish for example
If you want a Swedish version of “fuck you” I think the closest is “fan ta dig”, basically translated to “devil take you/may the devil take you”
Oh yeah and “fan” is pronounced fa-an
But it can also mean "Dra åt helvete" eller "I helvete heller" depending on the context :P
@@MrBern91 I was sure that “fan” just meant devil, I don’t think I’m wrong 🤔
Men borde inte FUCK YOU översättas till knulla dig? Det är direkt översätt då. Fan ta dig är ju en helt annan typ av svordom och låter mycket mildare än den förra.
directly stranslated, fuck you means knulla dig.
The first time I visit Sweden ..i laughed so much at the road signs.. Fartkontrol=Speed control, Infart, utfart =entrance and exit..I have lived in Sweden almost five years, went to swedish school and my swedish is still below average ..
Don't forget slutstation
Slutstation 😂😂😂😂
“Dra åt helvete” is pretty similar to FU. Means ”go to hell”. Used pretty much in the same contexts. Or ”du kan dra åt helvete” ”you can go to hell”.
You could also say "knulla dig" to it but its a bit of impropirate
Your Å, Ä and Ö was not perfect. But very close to perfect, I'd give you a score of 9 or 10.
nah, 6
@@Murre__435 Gissar dialekten spelar in 😆
nah 4
@@BerishStarr Egentligen inte, eftersom han härmade killen på videon.
Att killen på filmen råkade tala sveamål (det som förr kallades rikssvenska) är en annan sak.
I am from sweden and i also live here. Its really fun to watch you try to speak swedish. You actually did better than i expected😃
When you said Å, Ä, Ö it sounded like you can Swedish! It was SOOOOO good!
As a Swede, you pronounced Ä, Å and Ö fine! Didnt quite hear you say Å, but sure you did awesome. Goodjob!
I can recommend that you watch Hipp Hipp Swedish for beginners (Hipp Hipp svenska för nybörjare).
It's from two Swedish comedians and it's very funny and the pronunciation of the words is the best thing about the whole thing.
Such a fun video! You are so wholesome 🥹
It sounded absolutely amazing. You've got this.
Wow! Your pronunciation of Å, Ä and Ö was perfect!
Coming from a swede here, his pronunciation is absolute perfect!!! Especially of ”Ö” was REALLY GOOD! Not many people get it the first timr, I was shocked!!! Bra jobbat!! (Means good job!)🎉
I gotta say, I'm really impressed with your pronunciations 👏👏 you're very good at mimicking how Swedish sounds 🙂
Best example I like to use for weird plural nouns is "stång" (rod) -> "stänger" (rods). Stänger is not only completely different from the original singular form but can also be confused with the verb "closing" which is also "stänger"
Your pronunciations of å, ä, and ö were actually really great!
As a swedish, I’m proud of how much u learnt in 1 day!
I'd recommend a book for learning Swedish, the one I used was called "Alfred" (I couldn't find it in internet searches, though) and had a simple story to follow along and many, many exercises and explanations.
And after that I went to Sweden, into school and started learning further by using the language. And although a Swede would probably still immediately hear that I come from Germany I have become pretty fluent in Swedish.
you did the 3 letters great!
3:11 I got a strong electric shock from a metal door handle yesterday and then shouted "Jävla!". My sports teacher heard that and asked what was up (he just saw me jolt back from the door and swear) and I told him that it had zapped me, then we both laughed at it and went on our way.
You did so good! I'm genuinely impressed! 😍 Greetings from Sweden!
You can watch the videos "Mastering swedish lesson 1" and onwards just for fun. Those are great! 🙂
I'm swedish, and multiple times my teachers have shouted out to the entire class "Grupp sex!?", meaning group six, but also group sex. Hilarity
You are really good at swedish! 🔥🇸🇪
Your pronunciation of å ä and ö was very good
Also Gift means both married and poison
And venom since we have no distinction between venom and poison. =)
what a gift
1:05 Bro, you've said it better than most people I've heard say it. Good job. He probably put that in the video because most people seem completely unable to say them properly.
You got them (å, ä and ö). Many people especially English speakers get them wrong.
Your ÅÄÖ were perfect. If I had heard clips of just that, I probably wouldn't have thought they were said by someone who doesn't speak Swedish.
I think you really nailed the pronunciation of Å, Ä, Ö. Well done. Since I was a big fan of Father Ted, I tend to borrow the word feck instead, when needed ;)
Ima Swed and my dad has a farm where we get lots of people from other countries and its so fun hearing them try speaking Swedish!😂
I am from Sweden and you pronounced "ö" really well! Same with "händer/händerna"😍
You are right about the word "helvete", but another word we have for shit is "fan"! It's pronounced with a long a, it's sounds like "faaan"
Swedish is a really difficult language, but you did great!!!
well we literally have skit and fan doesnt mean shit
that å ä and ö was good! especially the Ö, it was spot on
Godkväll ha en underbar dag med Mvh Stefan i Sweden
Really entertaining and makes you think about it both once and twice.
I don´t know what it is about you. Even though I might have seen a react-video on another channel...if you do a react-video on the exact same I have to see it because you are so likable :) Keep it up!
the "ö" sounded perfect
It's true that most Swedes are good at english, but you trying is much appreciated 😁
There, their, they're - you maybe ”just know” but most US English speakers confuse those all the time. For some strange reason many non-native speakers, such as myself, get it right almost every time.
I am Swedish and your first Å Ä and Ö was spot on!
Your way of pronouncing å, ä and ö is excellent! I had a friend from Italy who moved to Sweden and he thought that everyone here said "För i helvete" continuously. We might do that, i dont know, it kind of means ”what a hell!”. A funny thing in Sweden is that we say "nä” to like everything. ”Nä” can mean no, ”nä?” can mean "what?", ”nää” can also mean (when we say it slowly) that we are hesitant. We also often use the word ”nä” when we actually mean the opposite, when we are being sarcastic..
as a swedish person i can comfirm this is exactly how to learn swedish
Your Å, Ä and Ö was perfect!
your Å Ä and Ö was literal perfection.
I've never heard a Brit speak Swedish that good when it's they're first time
Your Å,Ä and Ö sounded good.
Helvete is Hell, but we also use it when we, for example spill something or something goes wrong.
You for real sounded Swedish when you said the letter "Ö"!! That surprised me.
Also, that guy is teaching you how to speak with a Stockholm dialect fyi
Learn the basics- Hej=hello and Thanks = tack Good by= hej då.
you pronounced Ö like a native swede. good job. on the first try too
I could not agree more with you on the issue about american language... ENGLISH is the language... PERIOD!!! I'm swedish but I hate when people make english to an american thing. I heard one american woman say that she was on a site on internet and wanted to chose her language and desperately trying to find the american flag 😅
You can say American English, but overall its better to say English when we talk about the language in general.
Why we say "american" to english language is usually due to us meaning the USA "version" of english rather than the UK "version".
Finished the video now, it was great. I love your attitude! (earned a new subscriber)
Swedish is also a tonal language. ‘Anden’ (from high to low) means _the spirit_ but ‘anden’ (from low to high) means _the duck._
I’m Swedish so I can tell you that when you said Å Ä Ö it sounded kinda good ngl
I'm a huge lover of expressions, because there are some like "it is what it is" (a supressing phrase to just accept a situation, even if it's wrong) that exists in every language, and phrases that are unique to each language. Between English and Swedish, each language have words that don't exist in the other and trying to think around them is a chore XD The funniest one is that "kitten" as a word doesn't exist in Swedish. We say cat-child.
Your long Ö is flawless. I wanted to tell you that before you asked for feedback.
Å and Ä you might want to say in different parts of Sweden, if you wanna follow dialect ;)
Your Å,Ä,Ö was damn near perfect in my opinion.
as a swede i enjoy this video.
Swedish and english are much closer than the might appear when you hear them spoken. Vast amounts of words are the same or similar, often it's just the stress and pronounciation that differs.
Yes, and English syntax is closer to Swedish than to German, despite English formally being classified as "west" germanic (like German).
@@herrbonk3635 Maybe because of the many vikings that settled in on Great Britain?
@@rasmuslernevall6938 Yes, and Old Norse and Old English also mixed heavily starting under the Danelaw in the 800s AD, especially before the Norman invasion in 1066.
But it's also because the "north" and "west" germanic branches were much closer in the 400s AD, when Jutes (proto Danes), Angles (proto Danes too) and Saxons (proto North Germans) took their language, Anglish (English), to the british isles.
@@herrbonk3635 That's fascinating. Thanks for sharing!
You actually sound really good in your swedish accent :).
You are very good at swedish because alot of people cant pronounce å ä and ö
Heya Dwayne, always so funny to see your reaction videos 😁 I'm from Sweden so this is extra funny to me.
Also, great to see you thinking for yourself and being critical in your other videos with more controversial topics 😊
your åäö was spot on, never heard that before
Ö is usually the hardest one, but you did it perfectly! 5/5 from a native Swede!
Är du from samerna
Nej jag är en vanlig svensk, min tjej är samisk @@darthjarjarbinks2480
I could speak em to But Im Norwegian 😂
I love your energi!!
As a Swedish person this was so funny-
As a Swedish person I have never seen an American/an eng person learn Swedish. Ur a gigachad for learning Swedish so fast, faster than my mom's brothers Arabic wife🗿
1:05 tbh sounds really good for a non Swedish speaker, I think you nailed “å”, ”ä” and ”ö”
You actually nailed the pronunciation of Å, Ä and Ö. Most anglos mix them up with A and O.
Not gonna lie, you did it pretty well! // A swede
i think you have a great accent when speaking swedish. you have a lot of potential!!
I am swedish.your accent was really on point.l am Swedish and when you mimicked him was perfectly on par, says this swede.you sounded Swedish.if you lived here l bet you would do great, if you sound that polished.👍
Love these videos you make, so fun to watch you learn and speak Swedish. I think your pronunciation is.. probably the best of everyone I've heard trying it so far, that is not a Swede. Of course, not all Swedes are "good" at it either - especially if you are one of those who dislike other "dialects", not sure of the word in English. But dialects are different depending on which part of Sweden you talk to. Much like the UK and the USA of course.
Keep making these fun videos! ❤
Top of the iceberg of swedish grammar
The Ö you said sounded so good
as a native swede i think he did really good
This was fun too watch! Im from Sweden and understad Swedish ❤ And ”SEMESTER” is summerbreak not vacaiton ❤
I'd say you killed it on the "Å, ä, ö" pronounciation (In a good way).
As a swede: it actually sounded pretty good!
Dude you did great!!👍👍
There are rules to decide why Bord is Bordet but Stol is Stolen, but i cant remember it right now.
Im swedish and you did pretty good 👍🏻
It´s like ANY other country, showing that you have taken the time to learn some of the language(even if it´s FAR from perfect) is always apreciated:). Plus it´s a good ice breaker, belive it or not we know how hard Swedish can be to someone from another country😅. You are doing really good btw, sounding better than some people that have lived here for years.
The lucky part is that we speak pretty good English here but I think you as an English person speaking Swedish would be an awesome ice breaker because we are such a small country so that when people take an interest in our language we love to try and help or give funny examples of Swedish. Either way, if you speak Swedish or no, I think you'll have an amazing time here and I hope you do when you get here. Cheers, man!
This ws fun to watch. I agree with you, it is english. Cheers from from Sweden.
As a swede I think u did a really good job!!:)))👏❤️👍😊😁
bro im from sweden and your å ä ö sounded good bro that man is evil
Sounded OK !!!
brother u nailed Ö first time and ÄÖ second time! im certified swedish btw
Im actually from Sweden and u did great