Don't be that person who immigrates and doesn't learn the language. You didn't like it when people did it in your country, they won't like it when you do it in there's. A working knowledge of a language really doesn't take that long to learn. I had the pleasure of working with a chinese engineer who came to Australia speaking almost no english and seeing him evolve into a true Australian, swearing and all, still with the thick chinese accent.
@Andreas-gh6is10 күн бұрын
Har du donglebaer i rossen? About the only sentence I remember from Elvis...
@busylivingnotdying12 күн бұрын
I love your humility and interest in my country and your efforts to decoding the language. I have American children myself, so, when I see them I'll share your experience with them. Thank you!
@Andreas-gh6is10 күн бұрын
The bokmal from Duolingo may be useless in a conversation because of dialects, but I'm not aware of anything better to get started. Arguably, bokmal is the starting point, and without actually being in a particular city in Norway, there's not much you can do to prepare. I found all the smaller words quite difficult to tell apart, especially in the spoken language. Those are the most distant from other languages, they are frequent and easily misheard.