Thanks to Laura from Couch Polyglot for letting me do this! There will be a much longer "director's cut" coming to my Patreon soon, and remember to check out Laura's channel here: kzbin.info/door/HowOK8RrPns_-m1LPfoqEw
@matfalarn2 жыл бұрын
It's so cool that you, as a native speaker of English who speaks Swedish, pick up on the very subtle cues of Swedishness in people's English. As a Norwegian, it's always exciting being able to tell whether someone is Swedish or Norwegian based on their English. And it's especially satisfying getting it right if their English is very good!
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
I used to have a Norwegian neighbour, and aside from his name, there'd be absolutely no way of guessing where he was from. He sounded just the sliiiightest bit foreign - like, you could tell he wasn't Australian but that's all you could tell. Most people assumed German (so he told me).
@the_mrlightsite2 жыл бұрын
I'm a native Swedish speaker and love watching your channel. So amazing that you are learning this language
@TheCudlitz2 жыл бұрын
Although she struggles with pronunciation and remembering words, she demonstrates to be a real polyglot. Most self-proclaimed polyglots on the internet, when you see them speaking the language it's only "hi, are you from x country? I like x country's language. I love learning languages, and I've been learning x country's language for x long". And that's it. You never really see them actually having a conversation about topics. It doesn't need to be a philosophical discussion, but at least just converse, talk, whatever, like a normal person. No, it's like they only memorize some phrases. But doing what she is doing is really rare in the polyglot KZbin.
@CouchPolyglot2 жыл бұрын
Hi Lamont, I can only say "WOW" and TACK! 🙂 Your video is amazing, I am very glad you made it! I just sent it to Oskar too, I am sure he will love it as well. I think it will also help me to stop saying "deT" hehehe, but I am glad I brought Oskar to the dark side too 😂Tack så mycket och vi ses snart 😊
@JamalAhmadMalik2 жыл бұрын
I have been seing a lot of you recently.
@Mike-fv1fk2 жыл бұрын
"Det" is like more formal than "de" sometimes the T is silent when speaking because its more common with grammar.
@ctnt31262 жыл бұрын
I have a suggestion for an intermediate level language learning resource to do a video on: the Goosebumps series, by R.L. Stine. I'm currently learning Russian and I've been reading and listening to them for months. May seem like a strange suggestion, but consider the following: -They're short (audio 2-2.5 hrs per book) -There are dozens of them -Translated into many languages (30+ I believe) -Entertaining (at least to me) - much more so than most graded readers -Very simple plots, so it's difficult to get lost -Lower reading level than Harry Potter, but high enough to tell a good story Just something to consider. Love your channel... I've been waiting for you to make a new video so I can write this comment... sorry if it's a bit of a non sequitur with respect to the current video.
@OaktownGirl2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for that suggestion!
@handlethis692 жыл бұрын
That's my childhood reading! What a nostalgic idea!
@ctnt31262 жыл бұрын
@@handlethis69 Mine too :)
@julianeliask2 жыл бұрын
Hey Lamont, you had 2 lessons with me a while back, and I just dropped by to watch your video. About the German grammar point, it's actually common that even my German-native students make that same mistake, and I think you are right about it being a mistake deriving from English. I, however, think they make it because they are exposed to a lot of English-based learning material for Swedish. The second thing, about Oskar and Pewdiepie's English sounding the same, is because their Swedish is the same and that melody you are describing is the "Göteborska" slipping into their English. Great video!
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
It didn't occur to me about where Oskar is from but yeah I have noticed it among others from Göteborg, good point! With the other point: well, it's cut out of this video but interestingly, Laura actually learns her Swedish from German resources. Who knows why these things happen but I think it might have to do with thinking of "Heute/idag" as a separate thing to "jag ska köpa en ny bil" (or whatever). Like, you need to be an experienced speaker before automatically thinking "Idag ska jag köpa en bil" because even if you already speak a language with that pattern, you are still breaking the new language into separate blocks, so it's too complicated for you to remember that those ideas are actually expressed with reference to each other, if that makes sense?
@julianeliask2 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords That's a very interesting take, I think you're really on to something there. Maybe we start by learning the smallest blocks, building to more and more complex ones. If we speak another European language, perhaps we have an easier time thinking of SVO as one block, even if Swedish (and German) tends to break that structure quite often.
@PapperLapper2 жыл бұрын
Great video again! (I'm a Dane and I) Always find it fascinating watching your vids where you speak Swedish and/or watch other people speaking it. Admittedly my comprehension is quite bad, but it's so cool seeing a non-native from outside of the country learning by immersion, scheduling your own outputting practice and getting really good. I think Sweden and Denmark are in fairly similar situations regarding how few foreigners learn our languages without having already moved here. I've legit never heard anyone but natives and immigrants speaking Danish, so I'd love to see the type of Danish level that the immersion method could produce in someone from outside the border.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
An American supporter of mine named Jason is pretty serious about learning Danish, so if he ever posts a video I'll let you know.
@PapperLapper2 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords Awesome, thanks!
@juniemarin2 жыл бұрын
I’m Swedish and I just want to say your Swedish is absolutely amazing! Wow! 💖
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Tack så mycket!
@timothykarlsson31262 жыл бұрын
"poor old germany, what have they ever done, oh wait" I can't stop laughing at this.
@annimke57242 жыл бұрын
What a fantastic video! This kind of content is super valuable to me as someone floating between these two levels (somewhere between B1 and B2). Your videos about learning styles and methods are also great, but I would personally love to see more Swedish-focused content, especially about common mistakes, tips and tricks to sounding more native, and content comparing native speakers and learners. Would be cool to see some content focusing on pitch accent as well!
@clintusa2 жыл бұрын
The ultimate answer to everything: "I don't care. Shut up." 🙂
@annabackman3028Ай бұрын
"Bryr mig inte. Håll käft." (Short and abrupt, rude. Someone, most likely young, who is very focused on something different, or in general wants to be left alone would use a phrase like that. Literally: "Care me not. Hold jaw."😅) Or more well polished: "Det är ingenting jag bryr mig om. Kan du vara snäll att vara tyst?" (Literally: It is nothing I care me about. Can you be sweet/nice to be quiet?")
@unfathomablyunfathomableАй бұрын
@@annabackman3028 Jag skulle sagt "Jag bryr mig inte. Håll käft." istället
@narsplace2 жыл бұрын
genki 1 and genki 2 are text books use by universities to tech Japanese. Genki kind of means excited, heathy, happy, lively. Genki? how are you? Genki! I'm great.
@tomate33912 жыл бұрын
My feeling was, I was learning Spanish very quickly until, lets say B2, and I after this I have the feeling I only make very slow progress. Maybe that is just another indicator for that you cant't estimate yourself very well how fast you really learn :D I watched recently some of Lauras videos in Spanish and Catalan. And after this I noticed that she also has videos for people who want to learn German and I was curios. And her German is very, very well.
@centiljard2 жыл бұрын
Your Swedish is so good, I am Swedish and couldn't tell that you were Australian just from listening to your english. Bra jobbat, I guess.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Tack. Yeah I don't pretend to sound completely Swedish (beyond a few words) but no one guesses I'm in Australian, even here in Australia - Swedes think I'm French (because of my name, which is funny because it's a Scottish name).
@aell.e2 жыл бұрын
(possibly) happy about this video coming out 😊
@erikuslatinevivit3482 жыл бұрын
Skotta is only used for snow, that’s why.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I know (the dictionary says "förflytta (löst material) med skyffel el. spade, skovel eller dylikt; i syfte att frilägga markyta; särsk. med avseende på snö", so yeah, not quite ONLY for snow, but mostly) - but that doesn't matter, because it stills translates to shovel. All translations are that way. Try translating "Det spelar ingen roll." HAHA! That's easy! you say. "It doesn't matter." - Yeah, that IS the translation, even though that's not the technical meaning.
@erikuslatinevivit3482 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords Ja. I sverige har jag då aldrig hört någon säga skotta för något annat än snö i alla fall.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
@@erikuslatinevivit348 Jag undrade över det, tack för förklaringen!
@NxtnАй бұрын
@@erikuslatinevivit348 yep tänkte samma
@nathanaelsallhageriksson17192 жыл бұрын
I love seeing people learn swedish as a native. It makes me feel happy that people want to learn my language. Laura would definatly make herself understood in swedish, although the grammar is a bit off. The main thing that is off is her pronounciation I think, it's not good. But everyone would understand it in sweden at least. I really hope she keeps up the learning and find enjoyment in the language as she is amazing for how long she has practiced already.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Det har gått nästan ett år (tror jag) och hon lär sig fortfarande. Förmodligen kan hon bra svenska nu för tiden... bättre än jag! 😆 P.S. "pronunciation". Det stavas på samma sätt som det uttalas (även om ibland uttalas det fel!)
@nathanaelsallhageriksson17192 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords Damn, she's impressive. Och tackar så mycket för rättningen. Jag har alltid haft det svårt att lära mig språk, stavning har varit min största svaghet där hah. Det uppskattas då jag försöker bli så bra jag kan inom det området på engelska.
@James-wf8nu2 жыл бұрын
When I learnt Japanese for a year and went hard on listening for a few months I listened to a string quartet for the first time in a while and the parts were much easier to distinguish from each other - there's definitely some crossover with the aural skill
@DNA350ppm Жыл бұрын
Your comments were to the point, Lamont. There's a huge (years wide) difference between Laura's and your Swedish, but she is a real language lover (makes me happy!) and both of you are good examples for any language learner, you've mention learning methods that others could pick up and benefit from. If you are over 25, never strive the most to sound exactly like a native speaker, well, if you are not working at a call center and your job depends on it. Just strive to be a good enough, and *interesting* speaker: have something relevant to say, be a good listener, keep a meaningful conversation going. Find the people and the books, films, videos, songs, that help you in reaching that goal. Then you will have a lot joy from your languages. Oh, yes, people look younger and younger these days, it's fantastic! Might it be all the miles you run listening to languages on pod-casts? Whatever you do, keep it up! 🙂
@DNA350ppm Жыл бұрын
You mention, or you mentioned, or you've mentioned many intelligent points! I'm relieved I don't have to grade essays in English, my students would celebrate all the mistakes I would make, every one of them! Hurray for me just being a student on my own. 🙂
@fryrish77492 жыл бұрын
An open mug of coffee can stay warm for a couple of hours with a small desktop coffee warming plate.
@adhillA972 жыл бұрын
From what I can hear, there are three major things and one or two minor ones that make the difference here in the pronunciation of "basically": The first major thing is that the sound of the "a" in English is a fast diphthong, whereas the Swedish pronunciation had replaced it with a flat vowel that roughly approximates the midpoint of the diphthong. This is understandable, but unnatural-sounding. When trying to pronounce things in Dutch, I find that I encounter the reverse problem (and I imagine other Brits do as well when they're learning Dutch), as they often have flat vowels that are absent from English, but are close to the midpoint of a common English diphthong, so it sounds to a native English speaker as though these vowels are diphthongs when they are not and they mispronounce them. Secondly, the sound of the "i" seems to have been turned into a bit more of an "uh" sound, or a schwah I think it's called if you're being technically (or maybe it's just a really swallowed "i", hard to hear). I know English has a bad habit of putting schwahs everywhere whenever there are unemphasized vowels, but this is one of those times when you don't do that (it's less common with the letter "i", I think). The third is the completely unaspirated sound of the "c". When I pronounce it in an English accent, there is a very subtle aspiration after the "c" sound which separates it from the following "l" sound. This is completely absent from the Swedish pronunciation, and the two sounds run directly into one another. On lesser points, the "l" might be pronounced a bit too far up/back in the mouth, but it's hard to tell; and the pitch phrasing sounds weird as well, but since English doesn't have pitch accent that's not super important - if I pronounce it in an English accent with the same pitch as the Swedish accent it sounds like I'm being a bit stern maybe, but not foreign.
@KSLAMB-uz4it2 жыл бұрын
Basketballer. There I said it.
@MrZnarffyАй бұрын
I don't think I have heard you speak Swedish before, and you even have a southern Swedish accent :D .. Awesome.. And yes, I can also hear the Swedish accent of many Swedes like this guy.
@cardiyansane14142 жыл бұрын
(Possibly) not sure I should continue with this “possibly” stuff , oh well…possibly a big fan !
@sarnia75592 жыл бұрын
Great video! For only a few months learning she’s doing amazingly well. I’ll check out both of their content. Edit: Having just watched the whole video on her site I’d say her ability to speak Swedish is incredible after such a short time. I’m the same with the motivation, I’ve definitely tailed off over the last few months now I’ve reached a much higher level of comprehension. I keep starting to read or listen to something in Swedish, then decide to do it a little later. I’m making great progress through studying at SFI, but it’s frustrating knowing that I could do so much more, yet don’t. A large part of the problem is not having a specific meaningful and, most importantly, accountable goal. Perhaps I should commit to making my first ever KZbin video at the end of May to show my progress after one year of SFI. That wouldn’t work either though because who would ensure I did it? I absolutely love the way Swedish people sound when they switch to English mid sentence. I find it sounds a bit different to when they only speak English, because they carry the melody of Swedish through to the English more when it’s in the same sentence. I’ve even caught myself doing the same when using English words in an otherwise Swedish sentence. Thinking about it though, it would sound really weird to use my normal English accent in the middle of a Swedish sentence I think.
@sder4082 жыл бұрын
Jag älskar din dialekt! Dom flesta engelsktalande som lär sig svenska behåller samma monotona accent.
@ashley_smith2 жыл бұрын
Snow is interesting stuff, even when you live close to school. A minute or two by car, about ten minutes to walk, maybe 1994 or so.. When the winds blow hard across the field by the backyard, and the snow drifts all the way up to the roof, packing in tight while you sleep, you can't open a door or window by the next morning. Literally snowed into the house. Could not leave for school. Several people along our road had that problem one day. School principal was upset as we were so close. Thought we were lying. I don't know what to say teacher. Mother called you. Take it up with her lol
@LoyalSage11 ай бұрын
This video makes me kind of miss learning Swedish. The first language I tried to learn on my own was Swedish, but I didn't really know what I was doing and being in high school, I got distracted by other things. Then in college I was doing a lot of classical singing, and most of the songs I was singing were in Italian, so I started learning Italian in order to understand what I was singing better, and it was the first one I really made progress in, but then I stopped doing the classical singing and got into anime/manga, so I switched over to learning Japanese. This is when I actually started learning how to learn languages. There was definitely a trend towards practical whenever I switched languages, going from "this language is interesting because it's not what everyone else is learning", to "this will improve my singing if I can vaguely understand it", to "I want to understand content in this language".
@daysandwords11 ай бұрын
Hey, just because your story reminded me, there isn't heaps about her online, but check out a soprano named Louise Geller. She's British, and super talented, but she moved to Sweden a few years ago. She's been on Britain's Got Talent and "Talang" (Sweden's version of that show), and I think next year she's doing Edinburgh Fringe... Craziest thing is, she's a full time doctor, not a pro singer! And yeah, she also knows some Italian for singing obviously. I hope you just learn whatever you want to learn. Let me know if you need a hand with any of it.
@Stephanie-gv8rh2 жыл бұрын
I always enjoy your perspectives. 🙂
@EasyFinnish2 жыл бұрын
Love it!
@Howtofewithlove3 ай бұрын
Your prononciation is very good, you pretty much sound like a Swede, amazing.
@daysandwords3 ай бұрын
Cheers. I'm actually a bit better now... this was, maybe 18 months ago I think? Edit: This was over 2 years ago.
@Jgjbkhh3 ай бұрын
Your pronounciation is really good. Outside of the pitch being wrong on a few words your accent sounds a lot like a posh stockholmer haha. Extremely impressive for someone who learned the language as an adult.
@daysandwords3 ай бұрын
Oh my Swedish is WAY better now actually. This was more than 2 years ago. And I just recently actually visited Sweden for the first time.
@StrefanAАй бұрын
In Swedish you obviously say ”jag kan säga..” but you have to change word order when you start with Idag (or Det or ..) which is very common in daily Swedish speak because of immigration. Det kan jag säga
@daysandwordsАй бұрын
Who are telling this information to?
@StrefanAАй бұрын
@@daysandwords I thought one of the first things you commented about her Swedish was ”Idag jag kan säga” and my personal non linguistic guess that this comes from the switch in word order you have to make because you say ”jag kan säga saker på svenska” but ”Idag kan jag säga saker på svenska”. It’s an easy error for non-native Swedish speakers to make. ”I can say things in Swedish” but ”Today can I say things in Swedish ”
@daysandwordsАй бұрын
Exactly... No one was saying, nor implying, that you CAN'T say "Jag kan säga"... I mean, that's identical in basically every European language... I was making the point that although she speaks German, she hasn't picked up the v2 thing, which is the same in German. I dunno... it just sounded like you were correcting me on what I'd already corrected her on. It's a very weird thing that some people actually do.
@mubutukinkeke2 жыл бұрын
I totally get that assumption about a new language being automatically different even when it's not. I've just started German after spending the last several months learning Italian, and I'm finding it incredibly tough remembering that, for the most part, the German sentence structure is the same as we speak in English. I just assume it's arranged the same as Italian and French and I can't seem to get out of that mindset!
@toraengstrom6561Ай бұрын
It is ironic when Oscar says good luck in finding an English translation for "skotta sig ur" since the expression is an ad hoc translation of "digging yourself out of a hole" and has no Swedish equivalent set phrase.
@joshuanelsen86022 жыл бұрын
After seeing some German comparisons it would be fairly interesting to see German as one of your "dabble" languages down the road. As usual great content, Lamont!
@lucielou7745 Жыл бұрын
"I don't care, shut up!" such an aussie thing to say haha
@lucielou77453 ай бұрын
Haha watching this back a year later and liked my own comment hehe such an Aussie thing to say
@sharonoddlyenough2 жыл бұрын
Kvinnliga polygloter är inte så vanliga på KZbinn. Jag ska behöver kolla hennes kanal! 😃 Okså, jag har precis lyssnade till det där avsnitt om Oskars podden igår och önskade jag för mer!
@jonathanmcculley37282 жыл бұрын
元気 genki means a few thing in Japanese. Like good feeling, lively, energetic It’s also the name of a series of Japanese textbooks I’m not sure if that’s what you were referring to or not, but there ya go
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I know it's a textbook (now) because he says, in Swedish "I went through two basic books called Genki 1 and 2", but I'd never bothered to check beforehand.
@vinolentia2 жыл бұрын
Yes. "Heute kann ich sagen..." German does share the same word order as Swedish.
@thehoogard2 жыл бұрын
Question, are you aiming for a particular Swedish dialect? You sometimes have a bit of Stockholm dialect coming through (at least to my ears as a "västgöte"), which i find interresting.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
I spent about a year trying to choose a dialect, taking into account: - Whether there was someone I could mimic in it to practice (this concept is called finding a "parent" whom you will end up sounding like) - whether I actually wanted to sound like that (e.g. Emil Hansius would be a good person to mimic because he has so many videos, but I don't like the way northerners say sj... I actually quite like nörrlänska but not that sound) - how much material would be available otherwise (e.g. all audiobooks are just in Riksvenska, with maybe the occasional stockholmska coming through but that's generally the narrators choice for a character or something) In the end I never really picked anything so I just probably just sound kind of nothing-ish / everything. I have honestly been through ever phase of accent. In the beginning I got Swedes thinking I was Finnish because I rolled my Rs so much and so often, then I got Norwegian because I had an upwards inflection on everything, then I got Northern because I was watching lots of Emil... now I just get "That's weird you don't sound Swedish but you must be..."
@thinking-ape64832 жыл бұрын
That's interesting. When you said heute kann ich you sounded like a Swede trying to speak German. Interesting.
@azman65682 жыл бұрын
After only 5 months approx of learning Norwegian and I see a snobbery in between language learning, with some judging others for why they're learn a particular language. 🤔 Everyone has their own reasons and no reason is better than another. The question is what language is best for 'YOU'. IT'S A solo activity for the most part so make sure you learn a language that 'speaks' to you, so to speak, then the activity will be fruitful and more productive imo.
@EverythingTop-10.2 жыл бұрын
How did you become so confident in Swedish, I'm learning Russian, and I'm wondering how to advance to being conversational to becoming fluent
@azman65682 жыл бұрын
Could you provide any links to norwegian podcasts please if you could. One's that you recommend.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Sorry, I've never learnt Norwegian and I don't even actually listen to Swedish podcasts very much so I have no idea.
@Mike-fv1fk2 жыл бұрын
När du lärde dig svenska, var du medveten om olika dialekter som du kunde lära dig eller var det nåt specifikt som du ville lära eller nåt som var lättare?
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Hmm, det beror på vad du menar med "När du lärde dig svenska". När jag började var jag inte medveten om mycket av nånting, men så är det när men börjar nåt. Ju bättre jag lärde mig svenska desto mer medveten blev jag om olika dialekter och uttal men jag har aldrig försökt utveckla nån specifik dialekt utan undvika några av dem. Nu för tiden kan vara att jag låter norrländsk, finlandsvensk, göteborgsk, till och med skånsk. Jag tycker att jag låter mest som någon som inte föddes i Sverige men har lärt sig svenska haha.
@Mike-fv1fk2 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords För mig låter det som en blandning mellan rikssvenska och götamål. Men du låter som en riktig svensk och är väldigt imponerad på din grammatik 👍🏻. Mitt modersmål är engelska och som liten lät det väldigt mycket svengelska, kunde till exempel säga "drinka" och "fishka" och nu låter jag som född och uppvuxen svensk med rätt mild norrländsk dialekt😀
@ellinorlinnea6242 жыл бұрын
Lamont can you make a video about if it’s really that much easier to properly learn Swedish compared to other languages like French?
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
"Properly learn" - if we're talking to C1 or especially to a higher level, I think Swedish is actually HARDER. The higher you go with Swedish, the further you move away from similar vocabulary, but in French, you generally get closer. Also, I've heard about 1 in 100 English speakers nail a Swedish accent, whereas it's kind of "common" (1 in 10) in French.
@sprakifysprakify87662 жыл бұрын
Regarding pewdiepie's pronunciation, I think it's because pretty much all s's in Swedish are sharp. Listen to any ABBA song!
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Nah there are heaps of other give aways too. Even if he perfected his S, he would still give himself away in intonation and grammar use (I've talked about this in other videos).
@unfathomablyunfathomableАй бұрын
@@daysandwords Pewdiepie has actually gotten worse at Swedish since starting his KZbin career, which you can see in interviews with him. His pronunciation is super off
@michellesmirnova44712 жыл бұрын
These videos are so much fun as a native Swedish speaker 😂 And if you think that guy doesn’t sound like a native English speaker you should hear some people in my school, it makes me cringe so hard 😬😂 Not sure if you’ve come across this since you’ve been learning Swedish but most Swedish people really struggle with the “ch” sound in English, used in words like “church” or “chair” I don’t struggle with it as much since I also speak Russian natively, but it’s a great indicator that someone’s Swedish if they can’t pronounce that “ch” sound I’m also curious - what pronunciation issues do you have with Swedish? I would personally say it’s a relatively easy language for a native English speaker in terms of pronunciation, but I’ve heard the “sj” sound like “sju” or “sjuksköterska” are a struggle for many
@uamdbro2 жыл бұрын
I haven't studied Swedish before but the pitch accent could be a problem for a native English speaker.
@bobcaine45252 жыл бұрын
Also Swedish doesn’t have a ”z” sound and is most often pronounced as ”s”. So Swedish people will mostly just say ”s” instead of ”z” in english as well.
@Ronlawhouston2 жыл бұрын
So Swedish has a tonal aspect to it? Certain words have a downhill or uphill sound? That is so difficult for an English speaker. I know some Vietnamese but no one understands my speaking.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Hm, not exactly. It's often overstated in Swedish. It has pitch accent, meaning that every word has an associated pattern, but there are only 2, not 4 like Japanese. Very very fews words can use both and mean the same thing, but it happens sometimes. "Förrut" is one such example, some people say "förr-uut" and some people say "f'rutt" whereas most other words, if pronounced with a different pattern, sound like an entirely different word, or just are not a word, like if I were to say "per-sp'ck-tEEv" in English... you would understand but everyone else says "per-SPECK-tive". I think the difficulty of Swedish pronunciation is that it's basically the opposite of English emphasis, so if people aren't very careful, they end up sounding bizarre, the same as the classic Swedish "HellOH my name IS Vik-TOR..." - that's what we sound like to them if we don't adopt the proper patterns.
@sarnia75592 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords That’s absolute right Lamont. Initially I struggled a lot with the pitch accent. Even speaking to my Wife, if I emphasised the wrong part of the word she’d just look at me blankly, no idea what I was trying to say. After I’d say it in English she’d say it correctly in Swedish and to me it would sound almost the same as I’d originally said. I used to think she was just being difficult 😂. Swedish is very unforgiving if your pronunciation and prosody aren’t correct, whereas English is very forgiving in comparison. Luckily I’m starting to get there now. The other difficult part is which words in a sentence should be stressed. I’d say that’s harder for me as it feels far more subjective.
@garretttergerson774 Жыл бұрын
Its the tiny little swedish lisp that tips you off. Pewds has made it more subtle over the years, but in his earlier videos you can still hear it
@daysandwords Жыл бұрын
There is an intonation thing there as well. I have a friend who sounds 100% Australian for each syllable but as soon as she strings 4 syllables together, it's obvious (to me) that she's Swedish.
@languageoclock2 жыл бұрын
love your swedish accent in german hihi
@Angelo.languages2 жыл бұрын
Genki, is a book series to learn (basic?) Japanese. Idk I never used it
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for letting me know what was in my video.
@sicko_the_ew2 жыл бұрын
It's a bit harsh immediately assuming that someone claiming to speak a lot of languages is being dishonest. Some people are just over-confident. I would assume most people making such claims are just over-estimating themselves. Most people are probably monolingual - and many might even have almost a fear of other languages. So many humans; so many motives. I think specifically when it comes to English as a lingua franca e.g. a Brazilian and a Rwandan can use to understand each other (or a Swede and a Catalan) the idea of there being a "correct pronunciation" (and even a correct grammar) is destructive. It's also just plain incorrect, but I think it's worse than that. English is no longer the property of English speakers, so it's going to go and grow however it will, wherever it's growing. This means that Swedish pronunciations of Swedish-English are correct, just like Catalan pronunciations of Catalan-English are correct. (I get stuck on this "accent perfectionism" thing. Sorry.) So now I have a way to agree with you that the right way to learn Swedish is to get the little details right. There isn't really an "English-Swedish" that English speakers have become the owners of. There's "foreign Swedish", which is Swedish with more mistakes in it than a local who don't speak so good gonna have. So ya gotta fix your Swedish when she's crook, mate. (This last sentence is valid English somewhere.) At last I have peace of mind. For one set of reasons, the right way to learn a language is to try to internalize it so much that you wear it in your thoughts as if it was your own mind's skin; and for another set of reasons, English is going to become whatever _all_ English speakers ultimately make it into. It's a different language. It's Latin. It's what French was. You have to get it right; and there's no one right way. No contradiction.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
I don't think I said that everyone who says that is being dishonest, but if I did then you need to remember that this didn't have a script.
@rosaria88052 жыл бұрын
Not gonna lie. I’m from Sweden and you sound like a swede when you speak Swedish !
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Haha tack. I can't keep it up for long, I normally give myself away pretty quickly but I get a lot closer than most people and that's enough for most Swedes. 😆
@rosaria88052 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords Det är absolut tillräckligt för mig! Om jag skulle prata med dig skulle det kännas som om jag pratade med en svensk!! Det har varit roligt att se dig utvecklas inom det svenska språket, tillskillnad från de mesta personer som lär sig svenska så e du jättebra på att uttala ä,å och ö! Imponerande måste jag ändå säga 👏
@jwidiot6912Ай бұрын
At 3:43 when you said "Jo jättebra" you sounded very Swedish. It sounded very much like a dialect from northern Sweden.
@bofbob12 жыл бұрын
Cold coffee is a crime against humanity.
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Someone pointed out that he might have a heatpad thing on his desk, and I suppose it's possible. It could also be water, but Swedes are generally not fussy (I mean REALLY not fussy) about their coffee, so yeah I think it was just cold coffee haha.
@JamalAhmadMalik2 жыл бұрын
I have been feeling like I have lost my fluency in English even though it is the only language I speak these days. Any tips?
@ShawnComposer2 жыл бұрын
possibly start talking to people? (just contiuing this possibly thing in the comments)
@nafdikyaaqsa2 жыл бұрын
Read more, vary the type of content you're consuming, find topics you want to speak about and practise speaking about them. Have fun with it, there are so many heights to language learning so try to enjoy the journey.
@lindaha2 жыл бұрын
"I'm Australian, so everywhere is cold." :D kzbin.info/www/bejne/pXiqXn6Ymalmnrs
@paholainen1003 ай бұрын
yes you're right in German it IS " heute kann ich "
@CuriosityUnchained11 ай бұрын
I think it’s some remnants of the Swedish pitch accent that comes through in certain words. For example the word ”Embarrasing”…
@InhigoAlai2 жыл бұрын
Rather possibly though!
@pinecloudYT2 жыл бұрын
I could possibly be the fjärde comment.
@DNA350ppm Жыл бұрын
Lamont, you refer to someone called Pewdy Pie, about "embarrassing" - it sounds like Stockholm-dialect (and some other dialects have a little of that, too.) Nobody needs to learn exactly that dialect, as it is one of the least liked and maybe the hardest to understand. You can hear that intonation as an accent when 08'ers (noll-åttor) speak English. It is very hard to get rid of. Even if it sounds funny, the intonation isn't really a problem when it comes to comprehension, as the difficulty is not the melody, but other Stockholmian features. It's just a language melody, no big deal. People from Stockholm are likely to say other languages have a nice "singing" to them. That's how prejudice works. (Noll-åttor are those Swedes that live in Stockholm, where the telephone numbers once upon a time began with the numbers 08.)
@daysandwords Жыл бұрын
PewdiePie is actually from Göteborg.
@DNA350ppm Жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords Oh, he is! One shouldn't make that mistake, but I can hear the difference between people from Skåne and Norrland - I couldn't hear Göteborgska from one word... but that is even more an dialect, which we almost all love... kzbin.info/www/bejne/p2LEnoiDfs12e6s Hope you like the self-irony!
@Tighris2 жыл бұрын
11:12 as a german I laughed hard :D
@TheWorldofRobbie2 жыл бұрын
Lamont, what's going on with your hair, bro???! 😂
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
That's how it always is, it's just normally from front on so it looks more normal haha.
@jbjbkbkjbknlkblkbklbkbl2 жыл бұрын
Possibly second
@Livakivi2 жыл бұрын
possibly first
@pipodrankje2 жыл бұрын
quite possibly
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
You have started a theme that I thought was some kind of cryptocurrency spam haha.
@reallivebluescatАй бұрын
Det är jättevanligt att invandrare säger sånt som idag jag kan istället för kan jag.
@beorlingo2 жыл бұрын
Often, he is speaking really fast. Sometimes I have a hard time following although being a native speaker...
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Hard time following Oskar? That's probably just because sometimes the sound wasn't that good because sometimes it was just from my monitor rather than from the video. I doubt you'd have any problems following him without that complication.
@beorlingo2 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords yeah could be that. But he does often speak fast too!
@ShoutsWillEcho12 жыл бұрын
7:38 Din svenska är hur bra som helst
@meckarelis32352 жыл бұрын
Det låter som om du har bott i Sverige i 6 -7 år. Men ändå har du aldrig varit här, utan bor på totalt andra sidan jorden.
@uchuuseijin2 жыл бұрын
Lol we all know why people have to have excuses for learning Japanese tho
@bofbob12 жыл бұрын
Why? (genuine question. I don't get the joke)
@uchuuseijin2 жыл бұрын
@@bofbob1 people in the Japanese learning community go to great lengths to avoid being labeled a weeaboo or accused of having yellow fever
@bofbob12 жыл бұрын
@@uchuuseijin Ah ok. Thanks!
@ekengrenmarkus2 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/pXiqXn6Ymalmnrs Du pratar som vilken östermalmbsbo som helst..:) keep it up... faan vad roligt!! :)
@OfficialZunkahMusic2 жыл бұрын
wow vad stockholms dialekt du har, men göteborsk dialekt är bättre haha ;P nu kommer östkusten efter mig haha
@OfficialZunkahMusic2 жыл бұрын
+ att göteborgska mer eller mindre hela västkusten har en del från Skottland som har format oss med i dialekt. and if you need proof look att the graves from the 1800 on the west coast :)
@twopaypal_f12 жыл бұрын
Did you just get out of the shower?
@daysandwords2 жыл бұрын
Maybe like an hour before. I never get straight out because it normally takes at least 40 minutes to set the camera and light up etc.
@electricalstuff2592 жыл бұрын
Bro i love your lips they're like solid yet pliable rubber The fuck's going on with your hair though?
@herrbonk3635Ай бұрын
5:59 _"När jag började [med] italienska kunde jag förstå allt"_ is idiomatic and fine, not the wrong order. She said _"När jag började [med] italienska, jag kunde förstå allt"_ though, and that's not fully correct.