I really, really enjoyed this video. I am extremely impressed with your language skills throughout your journey to all the different countries you have visited so far. You never cease to amaze me. Brilliant job....... well done!
Thanks so much Lisa. I had a blast and it was great to be there with you and learning more about Norwegian culture and language. My favourite place is still Bø! hehe
This is wonderful, you seem to have done an amazing job at learning Norwegian. I need to learn how to manage my time like you have done! :) Thanks for sharing.
No, no app will help you reach fluency. You need to follow a structured course. I recommend using what I now use bit.ly/SpeakNorskVikingA0-B2 you can get 20% with my code MOFF20
Hi Kishor, I'm not sure about how difficult it is to find work. Sorry :( I'm so glad you enjoyed this video and thank you for your kind feedback. I think you will also enjoy my guide to common Norwegian mistakes here > bit.ly/NorwegianMistakes
Hello everyone I have been studying Norwegian for a couple of months now. I’m at a level where I can talk about certain things but I’m definitely not fluent. Also I’m self learned! I made a group chat in the app Goodwall (the app is called “Norwegian”) so if anyone’s interested I would like to become studying mates and practice with him/her!!!
I was told to learn Bokmål first. As its considerd the standard and most common. After you learn it then you can learn Nynorsk if you wish. My friend who lives near Oslo and was born in Norway said he never learned Nynorsk in school. So it may not be that important to most. It just depends on the individuals needs.
I really enjoyed your video and it is really motivating for someone who wants to keep studying a new language! But please, don't make tortellini with that sauce Lol :)
You say almost no-one uses Bokmål. well, if you think that the 87% of the population that uses this writing system is "almost nobody", then you're mistaken... that's 4,726,710 / 5,433,000 million that uses Bokmål over Nynorsk: "Historically, Bokmål is a Norwegian-ised variety of Danish, while Nynorsk is a language form based on Norwegian dialects and puristic opposition to Danish. ... Thus, 13% are frequently writing Nynorsk, though the majority speak dialects that resemble Nynorsk more closely than Bokmål." That's 4,726,710 / 5,433,000 million that uses Bokmål over the 706,290 that use Nynorsk... bearing in mind that some of these of either group actually use a neutral writing system, thus use their local town/village dialect as well as EITHER Bokmål or Nynorsk. Also, you can't "speak" writing standards... you use them... Which brings me to my next point: Bokmål and Nynorsk are not "languages", although - yes - the degrees of differences between all the dialects of Norway are almost enough to constitute them to be totally different languages, taking note that dialects using Bokmål sound closer to Swedish, meanwhile look more Danish, meanwhile various local dialects using Nynorsk can appear, well, linguistically "Norwegian".
I really, really enjoyed this video. I am extremely impressed with your language skills throughout your journey to all the different countries you have visited so far. You never cease to amaze me. Brilliant job....... well done!
Thank you so much. I absolutely love putting into practice what I've learned. It's a lot of fun ;)
I know it's pretty randomly asking but do anyone know a good site to watch newly released movies online?
@Prince Fox Flixportal :D
@Armando Timothy Thanks, I went there and it seems like a nice service =) I appreciate it!!
@Prince Fox Glad I could help :)
Great video. What a place and the improvement in you language is amazing 🤯🤯
Thank you so much. I'm really enjoying learning Norwegian. It's such a beautiful melodic language :)
Love how this video turned out! We had such an amazing trip to Lofoten and I loved seeing you use your new Norwegian skills there!
Thanks so much Lisa. I had a blast and it was great to be there with you and learning more about Norwegian culture and language. My favourite place is still Bø! hehe
Another stunner of a video Michelle! I’m so impressed by how much you’ve learned in 6 months (with a FT job!!)
Thanks so much Monica. It’s amazing how much can be learned with such little time, you just need the right resources and motivation 😉 🤓
Love to get that book
This is wonderful, you seem to have done an amazing job at learning Norwegian. I need to learn how to manage my time like you have done! :) Thanks for sharing.
It's an endless battle. Don't be too hard on yourself if you can't always study. Just enjoy the journey and do it in your own time :)
Good video. Lofoten must be fabulous! Also good language advice.
Sebastian Brindus thank you so much, Sebastian. Lofoten is absolutely GORGEOUS 💕
I only use duolingo ❤️ will I be able to become fluent with the app?
No, no app will help you reach fluency. You need to follow a structured course. I recommend using what I now use bit.ly/SpeakNorskVikingA0-B2 you can get 20% with my code MOFF20
How difficult is it for foreign students to get a part time job in Tromso? BTW the video on language is helpful, thanks :)
Hi Kishor, I'm not sure about how difficult it is to find work. Sorry :( I'm so glad you enjoyed this video and thank you for your kind feedback. I think you will also enjoy my guide to common Norwegian mistakes here > bit.ly/NorwegianMistakes
Did you spot the supermarket's writing mistake regarding the breakfast rolls? Greetings from Bergen.
Veldig bra video. 😊
Tusen takk Pete :)
Hello everyone I have been studying Norwegian for a couple of months now. I’m at a level where I can talk about certain things but I’m definitely not fluent. Also I’m self learned! I made a group chat in the app Goodwall (the app is called “Norwegian”) so if anyone’s interested I would like to become studying mates and practice with him/her!!!
how can i study norwegian as an internationalstudent
Can you give us norwegian podcast recommendations?
Yes! I like to listen to open.spotify.com/show/2RODeyQhipqoLjfHmPGpiN
i wish i could effort a norwegian class :(
Very good place ♥️
Very nice
Good :-)
Do you learn Bokmål or Nynorsk?
Are they similar or not?
Which are the difficults to learn norwegian?
I’m learning Bokmål. They are quite different but share some similarities
I was told to learn Bokmål first. As its considerd the standard and most common. After you learn it then you can learn Nynorsk if you wish. My friend who lives near Oslo and was born in Norway said he never learned Nynorsk in school. So it may not be that important to most. It just depends on the individuals needs.
So good place ...😘😘
Where r u from
I really enjoyed your video and it is really motivating for someone who wants to keep studying a new language! But please, don't make tortellini with that sauce Lol :)
Thank you so much Mara :) Haha there wasn't much selection sauce wise. It was a small supermarket haha
So it's rl duolingo
What camera do you use?
Canon G7X Mark II, DJI Mavic Pro and Fujfilm XT-2
You say almost no-one uses Bokmål. well, if you think that the 87% of the population that uses this writing system is "almost nobody", then you're mistaken... that's 4,726,710
/ 5,433,000 million that uses Bokmål over Nynorsk: "Historically, Bokmål is a Norwegian-ised variety of Danish, while Nynorsk is a language form based on Norwegian dialects and puristic opposition to Danish. ... Thus, 13% are frequently writing Nynorsk, though the majority speak dialects that resemble Nynorsk more closely than Bokmål."
That's 4,726,710
/ 5,433,000 million that uses Bokmål over the 706,290
that use Nynorsk... bearing in mind that some of these of either group actually use a neutral writing system, thus use their local town/village dialect as well as EITHER Bokmål or Nynorsk.
Also, you can't "speak" writing standards... you use them... Which brings me to my next point: Bokmål and Nynorsk are not "languages", although - yes - the degrees of differences between all the dialects of Norway are almost enough to constitute them to be totally different languages, taking note that dialects using Bokmål sound closer to Swedish, meanwhile look more Danish, meanwhile various local dialects using Nynorsk can appear, well, linguistically "Norwegian".