10 key verbs in Icelandic

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2025

Комментарии • 31

  • @richardnagele5877
    @richardnagele5877 5 лет назад +6

    So happy i found these. Pleeeease make more, takk🇮🇸🇮🇸

  • @lenninchi
    @lenninchi 5 лет назад +6

    takk fyrir, vinsamlegast hlaðið upp fleiri myndböndum !

  • @richardnagele5877
    @richardnagele5877 5 лет назад +8

    These are some of the best on utube, thank you so much.❄❄🌋🌋🇮🇸🇮🇸

  • @lightljos7999
    @lightljos7999 5 лет назад +15

    Could you make the conversation in icelandic? Also important icelandic words, phrases and more grammer. How to use ing form in Icelandic like in English and past participle.

    • @edarmwrestling
      @edarmwrestling 2 года назад +2

      I am studying icelandic and the ing form is the following: Èg (i) er (am) að læra (learning) íslensku (icelandic)
      So: Ég er að+ verbe "to"...

    • @MakePresenceNow
      @MakePresenceNow Год назад

      How's your studying going 1 year later?@@edarmwrestling

  • @chriswesolowski7730
    @chriswesolowski7730 Год назад +1

    I love your videos can you do more please😊

  • @mathassu4701
    @mathassu4701 2 года назад +1

    Please, keep posting more and more videos!

    • @learnicelandic
      @learnicelandic  2 года назад

      That was always the plan but I haven't got around to it yet due to other priorities.

  • @hyelimsong5171
    @hyelimsong5171 4 года назад +6

    0:05 að vera 0:33 að hafa 1:03 að gera 1:33 að segja 2:08 að fara 2:42 að fá 3:16 að búa til 3:51 að vita 4:22 að hugsa 4:58 að taka

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Год назад +1

      It could also be þú erð / hann erst / hún ers / (it) ert & þú varð / hann varst / hún vars / (it) vart or erst for the second person singular pronoun and ert for he and erð for it (or something like that, depending on which one sounds better with a certain pronoun) because the verb form for the third person pronouns shouldn’t be the same as the verb form for the first person pronoun - and for the others also, there should be a few changes, and I’m going to use these modified versions myself because they make a lot more sense logically, and myself being the perfectionist and also OCD, I always notice when a verb has the same form used for more than one pronoun, and it shouldn’t be like that (even in English, and English verbs are not even easy to modify because English words have been made to sound so neutral that the endings that would work with verbs in other languages don’t work with verbs in English, especially the plural forms) but, luckily in most Germanic / Latin / Celtic languages most pronouns are used with verbs that have different verbs endings, and I think Italian has different verb endings for all the pronouns, and in most Germanic languages it’s only a few of them that need to be modified, and Icelandic verbs would work with different types of endings, as Icelandic is not neutral sounding and has even kept the 3 grammatical genders (thank dog, because it means more variation and more diversity) and it also has a lot of vowels, so it’s even easier to create different verb endings when there are many different vowels!

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Год назад +1

      The second one to have, for we it could have also been with an A (hafum) and for he / she / it the endings could be -st / -s / -t after the UR or even hefirst / hefirs / hefirt and hafðist / hafðis / hafðit or something like that, and the ending for they should be hafu or hafá because it shouldn’t be the same form as the infinitive að hafa - the endings st / s / t are great for the 3rd person singular pronouns, and very easy to remember for the masculine form both S & T, while the one for she would be with an S, and the one for it with a T which sounds more neutral, or it could be the ones with a T for the masculine he, and the ones with ST for the more neutral pronoun it! And the verb to get, maybe the infinitive should be changed to að fa (instead of fá) because fá is used with the 3rd person plural pronoun! I will definitely think of really good endings, also for the other verbs that are used with the 3rd person singular pronouns and with the 2nd person singular pronoun, which usually need some modifying, especially after I learn a lot of vocab! I started learning a lot of words in Icelandic, and the video is like 10 hours long with over 1.500 words, so it’s a good start! I also need to rewatch the videos on pronunciation, because the LL sometimes sounds like K and sometimes sounds like T, so I’m not sure if I hear it correctly, and I don’t know exactly if the clicking sound is supposed to be a K or a T sound!

  • @savagesavanah4656
    @savagesavanah4656 3 года назад +1

    So helpful. Hope you could make more

  • @nataliehowe6213
    @nataliehowe6213 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much! This is the simple list of common verb conjugations I have been looking for. Headed to Iceland soon, and can't wait. :)

  • @michelakoessihou5929
    @michelakoessihou5929 Год назад

    Thank you very. We need to know more so give us others verbs please.

  • @JGMPOTHR
    @JGMPOTHR 4 месяца назад

    Are these all nominative verbs? thanks

  • @violentbob
    @violentbob 5 лет назад +4

    Thanks for you videos! I love icelandic, it's hard to pronounce though, especially the R, i can't roll it

    • @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038
      @thetrueoneandonlyladyprinc8038 Год назад

      Technically, one doesn’t have to roll the Rs, and I use a soft normal R in Icelandic and Spanish etc - I highly recommend using a soft normal R in all languages that aren’t English, as soft Rs have the best and most refined sound, whereas rolled R can be very harsh like the double R in Spanish, and I find Icelandic pronunciation very easy, tho the NN sound can be quite tricky and requires more practice and more time to figure out how to make it!

  • @orangebetsy
    @orangebetsy 4 года назад

    i'll be crackin out on this for awhile

  • @michaelpickering7127
    @michaelpickering7127 2 года назад

    Really useful, takk

  • @philippecharron7942
    @philippecharron7942 4 года назад

    Merci..

  • @pr.miguelmaciel817
    @pr.miguelmaciel817 27 дней назад

    Socorro 😢

  • @cyriangravier9402
    @cyriangravier9402 4 года назад +1

    Is there only present and simple past in Icelandic?

    • @talklikeaviking
      @talklikeaviking 4 года назад

      Conjugated, yes, but both in the indicative and the subjunctive!

  • @cesararroyavemontes5042
    @cesararroyavemontes5042 11 месяцев назад

    Takk fyrir

  • @valentynsabulis2858
    @valentynsabulis2858 2 года назад

    Takk!

  • @ellepalmer4590
    @ellepalmer4590 2 года назад +1

    There is so little Icelandic on RUclips, takk

  • @traceybriem7695
    @traceybriem7695 5 лет назад +1

    🇨🇦👍

  • @kevinfisher2767
    @kevinfisher2767 4 года назад

    sounds like you
    pronounce it "sau" and not "þau;" could you please clarify?

    • @learnicelandic
      @learnicelandic  4 года назад +1

      There can be a slight "whistling" sound in pronouncing the þ in "þau" but it is very different from "sau" (which is not a word in Icelandic).

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 Год назад

      The þ aka the thorn sound is the TH sound in the English word through, and the other one called the eth (the ð) is the TH sound in the English word breathe, which is closer to a D sound than a T sound, but they should just be pronounced like normal soft D and soft T, which would be way easier, and it’s almost the same sound!