Well, I'm a Finn. My mothertong, my native language is Finnish. And I have always been very interested of it. I got Laudatur from the Finnish language in my matriculation examination. I'm 47 years old now, and I feel like I learn more of this beautiful language of mine basically every week or so. I've never stopped learning and hopefully I never will!
@@guruchintanan5686 I'd say the most important thing in learning any language is to be patient and interested in the language. We like to joke about how difficult the finnish language is, but it's not actually harder than any other language, because all languages have their own difficulties. What you might find annoying about finnish is that you'll at first be taught the official, written version of Finnish that almost no Finnish person uses to speak (and there are also many different dialects in Finland so how different people talk can vary drastically). But don't panic, you'll learn with time if you persist.
@@guruchintanan5686 For the swedish part, you don't really have to learn it if you don't live in a swedish speaking area! but in a swedish speaking area it could be helpful
So true, I went to a comedy show in Sweden and everyone was really quiet. It may have been in part due to the comedian constantly telling the audience that they were a bad audience....
@@vanefreja86 Yeah, my canadian friends tell me that my english sounds like it's spoken from a native, but everytime I speak to a stranger they ask me where I'm from haha. I'm sami-swedish fyi.
I’m a Swede. When I was in Mexico I met a Norwegian and a Dane. We tried to communicate in some sort of Scandinavian and no one understood each other. But then as we were drinking and got drunker our languages kinda melted and we understood each other perfectly. So my theory is back in the days when our Vikings ancestors tried to communicate they all just got super drunk and took it from there. Maybe why there was some insults from misunderstandings too 😂
They actually all spoke the same language to begin with, Norse, an old danish “tongue” which came from Northern Germany/South Jutland, and can best be compared to the language of the Faroe Islands, and to some degree Iceland… 🇩🇰🇫🇴🇮🇸🇳🇴🇸🇪
It's a thing. I asked this Slovak girl I went to school with where she was from. She told me (a Canadian anglophone) in fairly thickly accented English that it's strange that I knew she was from somewhere else because she doesn't have an accent. (I then shared that my dad was Czech and she angrily informed me they are not the same thing, but that's another story...)
@@derkateramabend This is the first time I've seen the words "decent" and "hotdog" in the same sentence. It's just a very linguistic night for me, I guess.
Faroese people actually also have a weird Danish accent very similar to the Icelandic one, and it's the best way for communicating with norwegians and swedes
The Icelandic pronunciation sounds a lot like the Finnish one, when speaking English or skandinavisk in general. A bit rough and very, very familiar. Intonation is different, though.
I met a health coach and teacher a week ago, and he told me that the chances of accidental inbreeding is so high there, that a specific mutation occurs more often on those islands than on the mainland: A couple of extra ribs.
It reminds of the time I had a danish customer come in. I work in Malmö and this dude was talking to me. I responed, "sorry my danish is really bad, could we speak in english instead?". He got mad saying he was already speaking in english. bruh
I haven't met anyone yet, who wasn't accutely aware of their Danish accent xP. Maybe it's a generational thing (I'm 32). Whenever an English-speaker has wanted to speak to me on mic, I've always warned them, that while my written English is fluent, my spoken English sounds like a German who just had a cavity filled and the anesthetic hasn't quite worn off yet.
@@Analyytikko got a similar thing in Danish, "den man elsker, tugter man." It means, if you're being a little mean to somebody, it's because you love them.
I moved to Japan to study, and agreed to help with the local Finnish Association with their language lessons. There happened to be a Swede of all things there too, and the Japanese teacher just happily introduced us, saying that "well you guys are able to speak with each other perfectly then, right?" We just looked at each other and snickered.
because Japanese do not recognize swedish speaking Finns or Sami and karelians officially in Sendai there is well being Finland center and teach Finnish and a Finnish scret church group and Finnish xmas ironic he promotes Nordic using English but never mentions norn that is still spoken in North England Scotland
@@oqqaynewaddingxtwjy7072unfortunately I am almost 100% certain that the Norn language is completely extinct. The last native norn speaker, Walter Sutherland died in c.1850
I used to work in a lab in the United States that did neurogenetic research on alcoholism. I wondered why our scientific director and our collection of DNA samples came from Finland. Now I know.
Kimi Raikonnen is a big role model of mine :D ! Guy crashes in the monaco gp, instead of going back to the garage/team, 10 minutes later he is topless on his boat, with his friends, seemingly getting drunk.
As a non-native Icelandic speaker (native English), I can relate to this. I always thought that Icelandic was so difficult to understand because everyone always mashes the syllables together. Then I heard someone speak Danish.
What makes the resemblance for me, is the subtle "harshness" and sharp consonants. Also the tone was quite monotonic, although the weigh was on different parts of the words.
+Chris The Swedish spoken in southern Finland is rather high pitched. The western dialects are based on older Swedish and sound more like standard Swedish.
It always amuses me how Scandinavians point the finger at their neighbours for being drunks. I met in my life Norwegians, Swedes, Finns and Danes, and I really cannot say which ones of them were more drunk than the others.
Finland here. He's absolutely right about everything he says about the Finnish language. If you just listen to the sounds in words, the Finnish sentence for "I'm gonna kill you" actually sounds much less violent than "I love you".
On the other hand Minä tapaan sinut means I meet you, like your meeting guests, so anybody who cant speak finnish should be careful in how you say this to finnish person, that you meet in bar.
Not sure about that. Minä MURHAAN sinut or Minä rakastan sinua. I think Murhaan is much more brutal than rakastan. Maybe it's more that you say murhaan stronger than lightly saying rakastan
My grandma spoke fluent Finn, absolutely horrifying when she got mad and started yelling and speaking quickly. I’d argue it’s almost scarier sounding than German.
It's funny how perception of language changes due to cultural and historical stuff. When Mark Twain wrote about German he found it too soft compared to English ))
@@JessicaMiller-pc4dj mmm... I can try to recall my impression of English from my past ) First, it's a bit high-pitched (typical for languages with rich vowels articulation). Also, it's kinda staccato... I mean, it's kinda more rhythmically prominent, like TA-ta-ta-TA-ta-ta-ta-TA-ta-TA, while my native language is more legato (some even call it monotonous). I guess, that's why rock and rap work well in English. Though American language sounds more relaxed for me.
@@JessicaMiller-pc4dj do you mean standard American English? Quite common, coz almost the entire world is constantly exposed to it. More or less the same with the British RP. But things change dramatically with regional accents. For me, cockney hardly can be considered as an accent of English language. Sometimes sounds like Chinese or javanese or else. Northern English accents seem as someone is just gibberishing all the time. Same for Scottish (with the addiction of lots of strongs "Rs".) Sometimes, I'm afraid if brits (non RPs) are really speaking a very different kind of English or if they are conjuring some terrible spelling in a certain demonic language. I feel much more comfortable with American regional accents, in general (with the exception of the Boston area). Canadians sound like typical Americans, but with some exotic pronunciation (house, mouse, about, etc). It's not usual to be in a hard time with English spoke by aussies, Jamaicans, kiwis and Indians, but, in general, you just identify that they simply are people who come from these countries, speaking with their strong but recognisable accent. No problems, because it's different, but still English. My issue, and the problem with lots of non-born English speaking people is really about the UK regional accents. Most part of the time, those accents and dialects sound like a mixture of several languages, with one or another English word. It seems a pidgin or something like that. Very strange.
clearly you've never heard native english speakers attempt finnish, this guy was perfectly understandable even at the start to me as a person who's heard australians give it a go lol
American here, and I actually left the country once... Was in Germany at a cafe and the server was speaking perfect English without even what I'd call am accent, just a very crisp delivery. I know many Europeans can speak English, but this was so perfect that I was compelled t ask him where he learned English so well. His reply - "back home in school in Denmark".
@@Eyepice Nope. North America and South America are continents, and Central America is a region of North America. There is no continent called America.
As a Brit with some schoolboy French and a tiny amount of Japanese I can only say how impressed I am by this routine moving through the scanda languages glued together with English and the audience understands perfectly. Bless all you wonderful northern folk
@@Finlandpro1 I learned basic Korean and it wasn't so tough, although you have to learn their writing system (which is actually quite logical.) I have Finnish friends but learning the language seemed pointless because their English is so good
I can and like to report, all the finnish guys and girls i met in Germany and Switzerland (just 4 persons) are speaking German like Germans. Fluently without accent. Very impressive!
We did have Icelandic Magnus Magnusson as the quizmaster on UK TV's Mastermind. Agree his accent in English was very clear and elegant. His catchphrase when the time was up was, "I've started, so I'll finish". We all wondered if that was what he said in the marital bed!
Finland is like the adopted brother who's very close family now, and Iceland is the little Brother who was your closest friend, then moved out and made a name for himself, then surpassed you in some things, and to your dismay, started listening to Denmark's favourite music instead of yours. Love you both!
I am italian, and reading the comments i probably am the only one here. I am so curious and fascinated by your culture. I ve been to danmark and sweden , enjoyed every moment of my holiday there , love the places, food, people. Cheers dear Scandinavian friends!
Miguel Sandels Eres español??? When finns happen to say "mina rakastan sinua" it does sound like they're gonna murder you while you sleep!!! Luckily, they say it like once every 3 years 😅 phew!
The funny thing is, I have a Danish friend who once, many years ago, tried to convince me that when he went to England everyone thought he was a local. And he demonstrated his shitty English accent. I had no idea how to tackle that situation... so I just nodded.
Try having english classes with 30 other danes... Some people are so convinced they are rocking amazing british accents when they all in fact sound like in this video
Indeed, it's the Copenhagen accent though which is also the one Swedes always joke about when they mock our language. It's clear that most of them have only ever been to Copenhagen, which is understandable I suppose. I guess most people visiting France also just visit Paris etc. You can immediately identify the Copenhagen accent if you're from another part of Denmark as well. The Swedes always use the excessive use of 'soft D' from Copenhagen a lot when they make fun of the Danish language for example. It's true enough but it just doesn't go for other parts of the country. The word "meget" (a lot/very) is basically pronounced like "Maard" (soft D) in Copenhagen which it isn't elsewhere for example. You don't get people in Southern Jutland, the west coast etc. saying "maard" so the stereotype doesn't really go for them. They still have both an accent and a dialect of course but it's not at all like the Copenhagen one, not even close. :) There's something about his Danglish accent that screams Copenhagen to me but I'm not really sure what it is. Maybe it's the "rhythm" or something, but you wouldn't get that kind of sound in Aalborg, Aarhus, Esbjerg, Odense or whatever. It's very clearly Copenhagen-English.
then you can't really have listened to a longe stretch of it an addition to 'rakastan'. It is possible to say it quite softly, not like he does at all. It is a bit like Italian, suitable for singing.
I went to Denmark once, thinking I actually could speak the language perfectly. It was so embarrassing when everyone looked at me like a mad man, Which is especially embarrassing since Danish is a mad mans language! I dont think I can ever show my face in Denmark ever again.
icelandic danish was way easier to understand than actual danish. the way your people pronounce letters somehow makes danish more understandable for norwegians
I'm Swedish and I can officially say that I love, love, love all my Nordic Neighbours including the Faroe Islands. We make fun of each other and we need our differences but we also share a history, we all have a deep rooted democracy and we live in the best part of the world that suit us, I think. ❤️
Man, I think it's sweet as well, even though feels like us Finns end up watching all that camaradery with binoculars like 'look at all those Scandinavians having fun' :D:D
@@NuorvaJ Man, you're in there as well, even if we have to drag you into it kicking and screaming (because you're from Finland). You are part of it. Greetings from Sweden
Two Finns go to a bar. They get their drink and sit down. After 10 minutes one says to the other 'Nice bar isn't it'. 30 minutes later the other replies.. 'Did we come here to drink or just talk'?
Here's the original text: To svenskere sidder i en hytte og drikker, på et tidspunkt siger den ene: 'skål', hvortil den anden svarer: 'Fan, skal vi drycka eller prata skit'?
Went to Denmark as a Dutch person, reading wasn't super difficult, lots of similarities with Dutch, but then they started to speak and I was lost as soon as they opened their mouth.
I'm from Mecklenburg and worked 10 Month in Netherland at the German border - learned the regional dialekt in 3 month - through my own low german dialect. Tried this in Sweden afterwards, by working there for 4 month. Could understand nearly 80% - Speak maybe 10%, by the end. Now I live in Switzerland for 5 Years, after 3 weeks I could understand nearly everything - can just speak 5 sentences today in this dialects... Can't really figure out, how this "learning germanic languages /dialects" really works... By the way: I still love The Netherlands, I have a lot of good memories of the time there!
@@elbruhmomentonumerodos9227 You mean Dutch? Id have to agree. I'm Dutch myself but when I switch back from English to Dutch it takes me a while to gather myself 😂
I remember I was playing a game of Among us, and I just started talking icelandic. And some Danes and swedes understood me and replied in their own language. We weren't talking the same language yet we communicated with each other perfectly.
I love that. I'm an American who was studying Icelandic for a while and was able to understand my cousin when he texted me in Norwegian. It's so amazing how connected all the Nordic languages are.
Icelandic is relatively monotonic and tends to emphasize the first syllable of a word just like the not related at all finnish. Icelanders in the other nordic countries have a tendency to be mistaken for finns by non-speakers of either language. and this works the other way. once I had a finnish girl read me a passage from an Icelandic book. It was creepily accurate.
Icelandic and Finnish have a very similar phonology, we pronounce letter mostly the same way, and Icelandic also often has the stress on the first syllable, similar to Finnish.
I'm a half Spanish half Venezuelan from Madrid, never been anywhere further north than Germany, and I still loved and laughed out loud at this hahaha I guess humor has no frontiers
If you are from Denmark then you would know plenty of Danes have lost a lot of their accent. Especially younger generations. I mean I haven't but I have a lot of friends with almost no accent what so ever. It is not like I can't hear Danish accent either, my parents sound really weird in English.
I am Arab. Totally unrelated linguistically, but find this extremely funny. One, for the comedic part of it. Second, for Arabs judge each other the same way. Not only, countries, but cities or even parts of the city. I think this is common among nationalities with diverse dialects.
Hah! We hungarians just hate each other. Like everyone on the train looks at each other angry/distant, but as soon as you ask if you could sit beside someone, they become very kind.
except the scandinavians are actually related to each other genetically. While "arabs" aren't. Arab speakers from the levant are completely different. Lebanese people are white. So you're not the same people by far.
Самое интерестное, что темпераменты наших и северных народов очень схожие, и много вещей , теже языки (Украина, Россия, Беларусь) тоже возникают смешные конфузы)
@@olivial5142 hey! russia is big, we are just all so different. I am from Saint-Petersburg for example and we are all almost identical to Finns) same mentality, same culture, only different language.
That mild clapping was actually a standing ovation by the nordic standards. 😀 (and i mean it as a compliment) i am Slavic, by the way and have noooo idea how I got here🤭 but, boy is that a universal situation with the related languages...😂
You should check Finnish comedian Ismo, or swedish comedian Fredrik Andersson. The latter only have a few videos in english but really good, and Ismo have alot
Ari Eldjárn is on Netflix, too, I keep going back to his show there because he's so funny in it. He has worked on these jokes here since and the show is sooo good :)
Non-Scandinavians: "Scandinavia is so cool. Such different, diverse countries but they still speak sort of similarly enough to have a basic comprehension of what they mean." Fins: "Yeah, we don't do that here." *Thousands of miles in the distant Ural region between mountains, lakes and towers of ice* Finno-Ugric ancestor: "I feel you, brother."
@@MrPicky - They're considered part of Scandinavia culturally either way. The "cross flag countries". I'm Danish and whenever anyone I've known have talked about Scandinavia, that has included Iceland and Finland.
@@VelkanAngels well you must then be a part of the younger generation that is more influenced by English culture. I see this in the younger generation in Iceland as well. Many of them think we are a part of Scandinavia. Even though that we share similar culture, lifestyle and flags (the cross) that still does not make all of us Scandinavian. And technically then Denmark isn't even a part of Scandinavia but is included "for old times sake" 😉
A Finn here. When I lived in the UK I had a flatmate from Scotland. Thick borders she spoke. Initially, no idea what she was saying. After I a while I decided to pretend she's speaking Swedish/Norwegian sort of thing, and ta-dah, all perfectly clear. :D
@@Lugmillord Saatana = Satan Perkele = Goddamnit Vittu = Literally translates to cunt, but in this context it means something more like fuck Mäkäräinen = Blackfly
Yeah they didn't handle the pandemic that well.. True that. I just watched an Danish/Swedish news about Sweden and Finland, they speaked about how/why Finland handled the pandemic so well compared to Sweden.
@@legendteigen461 Well, in a sense it could be argued (though only by crazy historians) that the Faroes are what remains of the old Norwegian Realm. The Faroes were a taxland to Norway since the early middle ages, but were awarded by the Brits to the Danish king as personal property (along with Iceland and the colony of Greenland) at the treaty of Kiel, when the Dano-Norwegian Realms were sundered. Mainland Norway was awarded to Sweden, the Norwegians rebelled and a new Norwegian kingdom in union with Sweden was established.
I love Nordic people. Always when i meet people from Denmark, Norway, Sweden we have a good time. Of course we drink a lot. Greetings from Finland perkele. Swedish cannot drink:D
@your alien overlord you responded! yay! As an American I'm illiterate and unintelligible in several languages. ;p Hearing Nordics make these comparisons is pretty cool
Also Estonian word "rahakoti" is "a wallet" and in Finnish the word is "lompakko", but in Finnish raha means money and koti means home so it will be understand.("moneyhome") (Also my personal opinion rahakoti sounds so cute as a finn)
@@vop4813 Yes, 'raha' means 'money' in both languages. Home is 'kodu' in Estonian. 'Kott' is 'bag' in Estonian. So 'rahakott' is 'moneybag' aka wallet. There are also 'seljakott' (backbag), 'käekott' (handbag), 'vöökott' (belt bag) etc. We can form so many different compound words in both Finnish and Estonian. Your K, P, T are pronounced like our G, B, D. I think that's the most important thing to know while learning either language. And by the way, Duolingo just dropped their Finnish course and I'm almost halfway done already 😆
@@carleryk yhank you for your long aswer! Kiitos! Iy is nice to learn new things and sorry that I write the 'kott' incorrectly. I just have forgot it and google transalte wasn't that good help. First time I heard the word rahakott from a tv when I was wisiting Estonia!
I'm jealous that a country can have a stand-up event with the performer speaking a non-native language and the crowd understands... wish the US would push at least a second for us to learn in school.
And I would like to suggest that the second language you should be thaught should be ASL (American Sign Language)! (I think that should be done here in Sweden [but with Swedish Sign Language, of course] as well.) - Sign languages are cool!
Though, on second thoughts, I'm not sure this is such a good idea - just look at the tensions between the Finnish and Finnish-Swedish speaking populations, and how they are intensified because schools are required to teach "the other's" language. It's not super pretty. :/ And requirement like this would have to come from a deep desire within the community itself, and then - why make it a requirement?
@@silviu7568 In the US, at least where I live, if you want to go to college you need at least 3 (Recommended 4) years of math in High School, 2 years of foreign language or 1 year of an art, 4 years of English/Language Arts, 2 years (recommended 3) of science, 2 years (recommended 3) of history, 2 years of PE, and there are multiple available electives. There are also options for Advanced placement, AVID, and Honors. AP is the only one to give college credit before college the others just look good on a resumé.
As a Finn it's cool that the other Nordic languages are so similar! I could actually follow my coffee maker's cleaning instructions that were written in Norwegian based on my Swedish knowledge (which is not that impressive to begin with).
@@maxrolland3148 Estonian a little, hungarian no chance. I've heard that estonians can understand finnish better than vice versa since to them finnish sounds like a weird ancient version of their own language.
@@ikkimi7745 Interesting, that's a similar situation to Icelandic and Norwegian then, as I've heard Norwegians sometimes can struggle with the "Old Norse" vibe of Icelandic, but the Icelanders don't struggle so much in the opposite direction.
@@maxrolland3148 more estonian and less hungarian but there are suprisingly many words that sound the same. J’ai oublié quand je regardais cet video, Je parles français aussi.
I honestly think that if this guy works on a new routine in English, that he could easily do Las Vegas. He has the talent and the charisma, and he knows how to deliver lines. I would pay to see him. I think that he has star quality.
Vikings were mostly traders and could be very accepting of different cultures (that weren't Scandinavian) because they were good opportunities to learn from. Let's not pay attention to the vikings that raided a village in Ireland and took the women to Iceland.
I've always thought that the Irish were/are QUITE friendly, definitely including the more Celtic segment of the population. The Welsh are great folks as well, and the Scots are intense. The English are the aristocrats, yeah, yeah... I think that Germanic and Slavic folks are often more "detatched" on the whole, compared to most other sorts of folks. Particularily with regard to the Northern German-Swedish scientists, philosophers, researchers and scholars, etc. kind of deal. Professors, etc. Finns just don't always say a whole lot, little bit different kind of deal there, but something you'll see in surrounding Baltic countries, Russia, Poland, Sweden as well, etc. Danes are friendly and chatty and Norwegians are somewhere between Scots and Danes. Southern Europeans def. put themselves out there more, absolutely. Being half German (Bavarian, Swiss German, some Swabian, Hessian/Thuringian, and a bit of Saxon), yep, my fellow German-Americans (and Germans back in the old country) are tough on the outside, generally much warmer on the inside, once you get past the sometimes rather prickly exterior. Thrifty, tenacious, and driven. And boy, whatever it is that we work on, WE WORK HARD!!!! My other side is Scot/Welsh/English. Particularly Scottish-English border, but also some Welsh-English border. Very traditional Christian/LDS, very conservative, 10 commandments, little bit more choir and politeness/etiquette/courtesy stuff, compared to the more poker faced, say what you mean Germans. Lots of imagination, musical/artsy stuff, etc. yes. The Scandinavians are not quite as "grim" or "exacting" as the Germans on the whole (perfectionistic, persnickety, deep thinking, philosophical, etc., that stuff is def. more of a Scot/German thing), wih the exception of some of those Swedes, Finns, etc. maybe. I just see the northerners as being a bit "goofier" than Germans, more often than not. But about as equally macabre/exploring "weirdland" type stuff, as both the English and Germans, Scots, etc., at least, for some. Some Edgar Allen Poes out there in Scand., thats for sure... But yeah, the Irish are awesome. 😊😊😊
@@BenjaminGessel Being a Dane myself I've gotta say that is quite an apt description(especially with regards to Danes and other Nordic peoples), well done!
@@elbruhmomentonumerodos9227 😁😁😁👍👍 Of course this being said, everyone wants to believe that the Vikings were all huge, blonde, rougher, macho sorts. Not just Mel Gibson, but most of humanity prob. No doubt many were, plus red/brown hair, little bit of dark brown/black hair, etc., but I think there is more truth to the blonder genes among Scandinavians now and back then, than to everyone being over 6 ft., etc. But yeah, Denmark rules. 😁😁😁😁👍👍👍
Oh my god I’m Mexican and that part of the Macarena being invented in Finland is the best thing I’ve heard!! i had to rewind 3 times to listen to the end without laughing 😂
Italian native speaker here. Finnish sounds very melodic to my ears. I especially love how they pronounce vowels. I look up to you, my dear Scandinavian friends, for your rich culture and for being able to preserve it.
dane here. My absolute favorite place to visit is italy. Such rich culture and foods, and im not even a food guy - this changes when im in italy. People drive like crazy though :D
I'm a Finn and my favourite language is Italian and I speak some of it, it sounds so melodic. Our languages actually have some similarities like in the way words are pronunced. Saluti dalla Finlandia ❤
As an Englishman it sounds like you guys have the same sense of brotherhood and rivalry that the UK has with Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Love it, long may it continue. Greetings and best wishes from your North Sea neighbours. :)
@@SocialDemocrat1789 you guys are literally brits tho (historically) how can you guys not be allied to us? why do you hate us? you have our system of government, our language, our scientific discoveries (well the whole world does but i digress), places and buildings over there are named after us, your comedy is like ours, you basically stole the london rap scene recently (as new age australian rap wouldn't exist without us, don't think we didn't notice) etc. we have so much in common why the hell would we not be brothers?
3:15 In actual fact: The complete elven language that Tolkien created for the Lord Of the Rings was entirely based on Finnish grammer. Tolkien thought that it was one of the most beautifully & logically constructed languages grammatically...So may he has a point here. 4:15 I mean come on: "I love you"- Minerakas Da Sin-varr(No idea if that is even remotely close to how that is spelled) Still that sounds like something from a cool fantasy world
Tolkien's Elvish is actually two dialects. The Quenya dialect is based on Finnish and the Sindarin dialect is based on Welsh. Both are amazing languages and sound so unique, I don't blame him for being impressed enough to use them for his elvish languages.
how to make to make delicious fruit wine in finland: put two raisins in a wooden barrel, add 30L of vodka, let it sit for two full sauna sessions, enjoy , if too fruity, skip the raisins, good for 80 swedes or 6 finns...
A while ago I listened to a Danish radio programme for over half an hour, just for entertainment, even though I couldn't understand almost anything. I just enjoyed the sounds. XD -A Finn
@@missdead1 Hahah, I wonder if that was sarchastic or not. 😆 But yeah, Finnish indeed is a special language and not only in how it sounds (like Danish) but also in grammar and vocabulary.
They say that if you ask a finn to teach you finnish you will be friends for life. Because that's how long it's gonna take to learn finnish.
I can agree to that lol
It’s so complicated!
Well, I'm a Finn. My mothertong, my native language is Finnish. And I have always been very interested of it. I got Laudatur from the Finnish language in my matriculation examination. I'm 47 years old now, and I feel like I learn more of this beautiful language of mine basically every week or so. I've never stopped learning and hopefully I never will!
@@guruchintanan5686 I'd say the most important thing in learning any language is to be patient and interested in the language. We like to joke about how difficult the finnish language is, but it's not actually harder than any other language, because all languages have their own difficulties. What you might find annoying about finnish is that you'll at first be taught the official, written version of Finnish that almost no Finnish person uses to speak (and there are also many different dialects in Finland so how different people talk can vary drastically). But don't panic, you'll learn with time if you persist.
@@guruchintanan5686 For the swedish part, you don't really have to learn it if you don't live in a swedish speaking area! but in a swedish speaking area it could be helpful
@@tuikkur.5655 mothertongue* (With best regards, a fluent 16 year old Finnish girl.)
The most Scandinavian thing about this video is the audiences reactions.
True, there were probably no alcohol available at this event..
Yeah they only laugh at Finland xD
Polite golf claps
I thought it was appropriate. When you hear something funny, you don't normally scream like the Americans do.
So true, I went to a comedy show in Sweden and everyone was really quiet. It may have been in part due to the comedian constantly telling the audience that they were a bad audience....
"Haha that's true, all other Danes sound terrible when they speak English. But not me though" - Every Dane watching this.
Fact.
I would say mine its slightly better - living in Great Britain for 2 years MUST have paid off in some way! :) :P
vanefreja86 believe me, it really doesn't
@@hugokarlen3510 well, my friends in England and Wales have applauded my english. But of course there will be a little accent left.
@@vanefreja86 Yeah, my canadian friends tell me that my english sounds like it's spoken from a native, but everytime I speak to a stranger they ask me where I'm from haha. I'm sami-swedish fyi.
I’m a Swede. When I was in Mexico I met a Norwegian and a Dane. We tried to communicate in some sort of Scandinavian and no one understood each other. But then as we were drinking and got drunker our languages kinda melted and we understood each other perfectly. So my theory is back in the days when our Vikings ancestors tried to communicate they all just got super drunk and took it from there. Maybe why there was some insults from misunderstandings too 😂
Haha
It's actually that everyone was drunk all the time. Then someone got sober and started messing around with languages, and here we are.
They actually all spoke the same language to begin with, Norse, an old danish “tongue” which came from Northern Germany/South Jutland, and can best be compared to the language of the Faroe Islands, and to some degree Iceland…
🇩🇰🇫🇴🇮🇸🇳🇴🇸🇪
😂😂😂😂
A Dane, a Norwegian, and a Swede walked into a bar?
im from finland and i speak danish perfectly when im drunk.
I'm a finn aswell. Only thing i know in danish is "god røv" and i might use it when i'm drunk but don't know appropriate situation to use it..
Kaikki suomalaiset pähkinänkuoressa
+peltsi40
Being drunk *is* the appropriate situation to use it.
so you only speak danish
I actually think it's a good drinking-language, since the words are very long and slowly spoken. It fits the drunkenness 😅
"You thought I was English because I don't have an æccænt".
That's exacly what I say when I switch to danglish
why is it some much funnier when you write it out ahahaha
It's a thing. I asked this Slovak girl I went to school with where she was from. She told me (a Canadian anglophone) in fairly thickly accented English that it's strange that I knew she was from somewhere else because she doesn't have an accent. (I then shared that my dad was Czech and she angrily informed me they are not the same thing, but that's another story...)
Not gonna lie, I laughed for a solid 10 minutes at this comment.
"You þought..." :D
I feel like I've accidentally walked into a family reunion, but the food is good so I'll just pretend to be some distant relative.
@@bjr8509 Yup both Uralic
I'm italian, my family is in the pizza truck outside lol
Please have a big plate of surströmming
Ikr? Vikings 😂🤣
I've actually been to family dinners in Denmark and Finland and the food was delicious. But living abroad has made me miss Russian food much more :(
"He must be rich. He must be rich." is basically what Germans think when they meet Swiss people.
well i think thats what everyone thinks when they meet Swiss :D
Or...polish people when they see germans
@Mathias Eggimann Then you're getting ripped off, a decent hot dog costs like 5.50 chf (55 sek)
Mostly they'd be right. I don't know what the definition of rich is but I think compared to most European the Swiss do pretty well for themselves.
@@derkateramabend This is the first time I've seen the words "decent" and "hotdog" in the same sentence. It's just a very linguistic night for me, I guess.
As a Norwegian, I think his danish is easier to understand than actual danish.
Enig
Enig. I agree.
Faroese people actually also have a weird Danish accent very similar to the Icelandic one, and it's the best way for communicating with norwegians and swedes
sant
The Icelandic pronunciation sounds a lot like the Finnish one, when speaking English or skandinavisk in general. A bit rough and very, very familiar. Intonation is different, though.
Any other Nordic person meeting a Faroe Islander: “He must be inbred, he must be inbred.”
I met a health coach and teacher a week ago, and he told me that the chances of accidental inbreeding is so high there, that a specific mutation occurs more often on those islands than on the mainland: A couple of extra ribs.
Didn't Iceland itself have an anti-inbred app, where you can check if the person you're dating is related to you? I've read about that.
Sweeeeeet home Faroe Islands! Sorry, I'm not even Scandinavian, just a Russian on a lockdown.
@@Roozyj Yeah i'm from Iceland and i was pretty stressed when i checked if my date now my girlfriend was related to me, thankfully not.
@@nonburger1778 Honestly though, there's a few towns in the Netherlands that could use an app like that too xD
Your observation about Danes being proud of their English while not being aware of how thick their accent is was so spot on and I'm Danish lol
It reminds of the time I had a danish customer come in.
I work in Malmö and this dude was talking to me.
I responed, "sorry my danish is really bad, could we speak in english instead?".
He got mad saying he was already speaking in english.
bruh
@@Crimp476 I can easily imagine that lol
@@Crimp476 Hilarious. And I love your profile picture.
I haven't met anyone yet, who wasn't accutely aware of their Danish accent xP. Maybe it's a generational thing (I'm 32). Whenever an English-speaker has wanted to speak to me on mic, I've always warned them, that while my written English is fluent, my spoken English sounds like a German who just had a cavity filled and the anesthetic hasn't quite worn off yet.
I'm a finn living in Denmark and I actually thought that was the funniest part of the whole video xD The impression was spot on
His Danish accent in English is spot on. The fact he can do a foreign accent in a foreign language is mindblowing
This video now has twice as many views as there are Icelanders.
Four times.
20 times
Lmaoooo
So this vidoe no longer requires a dating app that keeps track of who is related to who? (Like iceland does.)
😊
As a Swede I can honestly say I have the very best neighbours.
As a Finn I can't really say the same
We Finns love you too, but don't tell anyone, or we'll lose our reputation.
@@juhomantynen4638 If you would someone would try to invade Finland
No matter how much we tease you, we love you too. Nordic countries are these 5 siblings who keep teasing each other and I like it
@@GenetMJF Yeah, it's how it's supposed to be.
Hands down; all the Scandinavian and Nordic rivalry and jokes asides, I truly, TRULY love the relationship we have ❤️
A swede here, thats true 💙
Can’t have a relationship without taking the piss every day ❤️
This! It's like some sibling rivalery going on
In Finland we have this phrase : "Vittuilu on välittämistä", roughly meaning "roasting is caring".
@@Analyytikko got a similar thing in Danish, "den man elsker, tugter man."
It means, if you're being a little mean to somebody, it's because you love them.
I moved to Japan to study, and agreed to help with the local Finnish Association with their language lessons. There happened to be a Swede of all things there too, and the Japanese teacher just happily introduced us, saying that "well you guys are able to speak with each other perfectly then, right?"
We just looked at each other and snickered.
because Japanese do not recognize swedish speaking Finns or Sami and karelians officially in Sendai there is well being Finland center and teach Finnish and a Finnish scret church group and Finnish xmas ironic he promotes Nordic using English but never mentions norn that is still spoken in North England Scotland
to japanese every european is the same or look the same like how europeans think of east asia
@@oqqaynewaddingxtwjy7072unfortunately I am almost 100% certain that the Norn language is completely extinct. The last native norn speaker, Walter Sutherland died in c.1850
Finnish guy meeting a swedish guy:
*He must be gay, he must be gay*
He is gay*
and vice versa
It is because swedish men speak more like finnish women
Screw you we Finns are drunk.
*Finnish persu guy meeting a swedish guy
With 1 Nordic language you can speak in all Nordic countries
Finns: We dont speak scandinavian here
@Blue Steel No most of us doesnt give a shit to learn Swedish.
"We don't speak indo-european here"
@Blue Steel do not slander moominsvenska like that in my presence
@Blue Steel ye the "finlandswedish" is called "Meänkieli"
Basically an easier version of Swedish for Finnish people to understand
@@vilisalmi8359 No siis tää perkele
I used to work in a lab in the United States that did neurogenetic research on alcoholism. I wondered why our scientific director and our collection of DNA samples came from Finland. Now I know.
😂😂😂😂 ei saatana
Oh my god 😄😄 That's just great
Hahhhaaaa 😂😂😂
Kansantauti!
Hahaha.
Finns are the most badass people on the planet.. Big love to my Finnish brothers and sister here from Copenhagen 🇩🇰❤️🇫🇮
Do you mean "Kööpenhamina"
Kimi Raikonnen is a big role model of mine :D ! Guy crashes in the monaco gp, instead of going back to the garage/team, 10 minutes later he is topless on his boat, with his friends, seemingly getting drunk.
Russian meeting finnish guy:
dont drink with him, dont drink with him
I died
...and then polish guy came in.
@@natanlis8240 Lithuanian: can I join?
Czech: I got beer, want some?
New Orleanians: I got bourbon, a Sazerac, grenade, and Hurricane if anybody’s willing
When you speak three languages
You’re trilingual
When you speak two languages
You’re bilingual
When you speak one language
You’re
Probably an American
no americans are 0,5 languages
Magellanic
It’s .5 in America
Not ,5
If you’re going to insult an entire culture at least say it in American
Or Australian...
That's why they ruled the world
@ibesweetp2 Mate, English isn't from the U.S.A. English is English
American standup: Mostly sex or stereotypes.
Icelandic standup: Linguistics.
Well, he didn't mention sex but he did list a lot of stereotypes, so I don't get your point.
British standup: men in drag
Here come the anti-American comments. You clearly have never watched American standup.
@@juliaj7939 ua-cam.com/video/VcDYUnKd7BI/v-deo.html
icelandic comedy......no people of color allowed it seems
As a non-native Icelandic speaker (native English), I can relate to this. I always thought that Icelandic was so difficult to understand because everyone always mashes the syllables together. Then I heard someone speak Danish.
Icelandic - Normal mode
Danish - Hard mode
Finnish - *Nightmare mode*
hahahahaha
Danish starts strong and just ends in a mumble. Like a spoken doctor’s signature.
good to know there are other non-native icelandic speakers out there :)
what i find funny is as an icelander speaking english he sounds irish! lmao (by the way i am irish)
Finnish language is hard, that's why we keep our mouth shut.
American learning Finnish, seems like I'll fit right in.
@@me_irlg2413 You sure will
That explains Kimmi Raikkonen's "bwoah"
@@CrippleX89 and the fact you cant even spell his name properly
@@greatkali5866 Now now give the guy a break. There are no grammar nazis here among friends!
His Danish sounds exactly like Swedish spoken by Finns.
Interesting that you would say so. If I am not mistaken, the pitch accent is used in neither Danish nor the dialect of Swedish spoken in Finland.
What makes the resemblance for me, is the subtle "harshness" and sharp consonants. Also the tone was quite monotonic, although the weigh was on different parts of the words.
+Chris The Swedish spoken in southern Finland is rather high pitched. The western dialects are based on older Swedish and sound more like standard Swedish.
Matias Kautto jeg kender mange der lyder præcist sådan når de snakker engelsk xD jeg gør også selv hvis jeg ikke koncentrerer mig ^^
My friend who lives in Norrland says I speak swedish like someone from Uppsala, I am from southern Finland but finnish is my first language.
"Pay the money by wednesday" XD
The best part.
It always amuses me how Scandinavians point the finger at their neighbours for being drunks. I met in my life Norwegians, Swedes, Finns and Danes, and I really cannot say which ones of them were more drunk than the others.
Because all of them are drunkers hhhhhh
No u
as a finn who doesn't, can't and does not want to drink..
It's us
as another Finn who doesn't drink, it's us
All pretty drunk tbh
So, the Norweigans are the Scandinavian Versions of what the swizz are to german speakers? They also Jump an octave, love to ski and are rich :D
PommdönerTV i guess we Are, but we keep it low when the swedes come
@@nuddeb.9185 thanks
SamuelSomFan youre welcome
That comment made me laugh out loud 😂
Finnish people are a mixture of DDR national sport team in 80s, raggare klub från Jämtland in 90s och Lordi in 00s.
"saatana, perkele, vittu, makarainen". i just collapsed
Makkarainen
@@rykehuss3435 macarena
i made it, hope you like: finnish macarena song. it is on my channel now!
Those are all the Finnish words you will need to know ;)
*Mäkärainen
The way he says mäkäräinen sounds more like he says "sausegeling" to my finnish ears
Fucking sausagelings >:(
Herkko Koskinen Kuolin XD
Ville san you write sausegeling... does that have anything to do with soup? either way I am hungry now xD
No, it has to do with those irritating flying sausage insects we have here in Finland that sting you full of itchy spots.
Ville san I'm still hungry though xD
Finland here. He's absolutely right about everything he says about the Finnish language. If you just listen to the sounds in words, the Finnish sentence for "I'm gonna kill you" actually sounds much less violent than "I love you".
Is this some commentary about the Finnish love life perhaps?
Its Minä tapan sinut, but it depends on which kind of tone you say it in how scary it sounds.
On the other hand Minä tapaan sinut means I meet you, like your meeting guests, so anybody who cant speak finnish should be careful in how you say this to finnish person, that you meet in bar.
Not sure about that. Minä MURHAAN sinut or Minä rakastan sinua. I think Murhaan is much more brutal than rakastan. Maybe it's more that you say murhaan stronger than lightly saying rakastan
How often are you meeting someone and say "minä tapaan sinut" like yeah obviously I already realised@@jout738
My grandma spoke fluent Finn, absolutely horrifying when she got mad and started yelling and speaking quickly. I’d argue it’s almost scarier sounding than German.
German isn't even that scary sounding 😂 Except for when you simply shout words, but that's equally true for Russian & Finnish.
It's funny how perception of language changes due to cultural and historical stuff. When Mark Twain wrote about German he found it too soft compared to English ))
@@JessicaMiller-pc4dj mmm... I can try to recall my impression of English from my past ) First, it's a bit high-pitched (typical for languages with rich vowels articulation). Also, it's kinda staccato... I mean, it's kinda more rhythmically prominent, like TA-ta-ta-TA-ta-ta-ta-TA-ta-TA, while my native language is more legato (some even call it monotonous). I guess, that's why rock and rap work well in English. Though American language sounds more relaxed for me.
Does this sound familiar. VOI JUMALAUTA, MITÄ VITTUA MENIT TEKEMÄÄN? Eikö järki yhtään päätäpakota vaiko ootko noin SAATANAN tyhmä? ai PErkele.......
@@JessicaMiller-pc4dj do you mean standard American English? Quite common, coz almost the entire world is constantly exposed to it. More or less the same with the British RP. But things change dramatically with regional accents. For me, cockney hardly can be considered as an accent of English language. Sometimes sounds like Chinese or javanese or else. Northern English accents seem as someone is just gibberishing all the time. Same for Scottish (with the addiction of lots of strongs "Rs".) Sometimes, I'm afraid if brits (non RPs) are really speaking a very different kind of English or if they are conjuring some terrible spelling in a certain demonic language. I feel much more comfortable with American regional accents, in general (with the exception of the Boston area). Canadians sound like typical Americans, but with some exotic pronunciation (house, mouse, about, etc). It's not usual to be in a hard time with English spoke by aussies, Jamaicans, kiwis and Indians, but, in general, you just identify that they simply are people who come from these countries, speaking with their strong but recognisable accent. No problems, because it's different, but still English. My issue, and the problem with lots of non-born English speaking people is really about the UK regional accents. Most part of the time, those accents and dialects sound like a mixture of several languages, with one or another English word. It seems a pidgin or something like that. Very strange.
I find it funny that he at first doesn't speak Finnish convincingly, but when starts swearing it's incredibly spot on.
More practice?
clearly you've never heard native english speakers attempt finnish, this guy was perfectly understandable even at the start to me as a person who's heard australians give it a go lol
I think it was not about being understandable, ofcourse it was. But the swearing macarena was fluent :D
American here, and I actually left the country once... Was in Germany at a cafe and the server was speaking perfect English without even what I'd call am accent, just a very crisp delivery. I know many Europeans can speak English, but this was so perfect that I was compelled t ask him where he learned English so well. His reply - "back home in school in Denmark".
It's weird that nobody has politized this comment, but of course I've now jinxed it. There goes the comment section. Well done, me!
@@NuorvaJ Five months on and you're stil good!
@@NuorvaJ I'm really holding back here......
I hope you know that America is a continent
@@Eyepice Nope. North America and South America are continents, and Central America is a region of North America. There is no continent called America.
As a Brit with some schoolboy French and a tiny amount of Japanese I can only say how impressed I am by this routine moving through the scanda languages glued together with English and the audience understands perfectly. Bless all you wonderful northern folk
I'm a Southkorean learning finnish thia semester at a linguistics dept. and now I see what it's like to learn Korean for foreigners.
Learning finnish is self-harm! Get help as quickly as possible!
I'm free as of yesterday. Congratulate me
pretty sure korean is still harder
@@Finlandpro1 I learned basic Korean and it wasn't so tough, although you have to learn their writing system (which is actually quite logical.) I have Finnish friends but learning the language seemed pointless because their English is so good
why are you so masochistic?
Yes, hello, I heard someone sing my family's song "Saatana, perkele, vittu Mäkäräinen", what's up?
So your last name is Mosquito?
@@borderlinebae4010 "Black Fly" if we're specific.
Sukunimi Mäkäräinen? Sissos..
@@sami-9233 Etunimi Sami? Sissos..
Are you guys mocking each others names?
It's interesting how Finnish sounds so badass, but when native Finns speak Swedish it sounds incredibly soft and cute.
And when they speak English they sound like robots
There was a linguistic study that found that native Finns who don't speak Swedish as their first language speak Swedish in a higher register of voice.
I can and like to report, all the finnish guys and girls i met in Germany and Switzerland (just 4 persons) are speaking German like Germans. Fluently without accent. Very impressive!
It is Moomin swedish.
@@olivial5142 ayo dont give all our secrets away 😳😳
I'm half Finnish and half Norwegian so I'm in a league of my own. Master of all the nordic languages.
High five from a fellow Nordic mash up. 🖐️ I'm half Finnish and half Danish 😊
I'm fully Finnish but also speak fluent swedish (I went to a swedish speaking school)
Nu får vi se om du mestrer fars kødpølse
Man has all the infinity languages of the north
His version of the Macarena sounds like if Rammstein made this version lol
Stimmt.
Finish is badass
@@pirolocito Lopettaminen on pahaperse
@@user-pv7vc9kp9k 🤷🏻♂️
Now that is something I would love to hear XD
I love the Icelandic English accent... It's so clear and elegant.
It sounds very similar to Swedish English imo
@@NotASummoner It does not.
Then you would not like my accent i go down an octave when I speak English and I don’t sound Icelandic anymore
We did have Icelandic Magnus Magnusson as the quizmaster on UK TV's Mastermind. Agree his accent in English was very clear and elegant. His catchphrase when the time was up was, "I've started, so I'll finish". We all wondered if that was what he said in the marital bed!
Finnish cursing is best cursing.
Eestimaa!
yeah, sounds good, but listen to hungarian cursing, it is good too.
Meanwhile west slavic cursing be like: When in doubt, kurva it out
*laughs in slavic*
@@nomad963 I can curse in Russian, doesn't have the same umph.
Minä olen Kreikkalainen. I just started learning Finnish in Duolingo but I also love Swedish 🤣😉❤️🇬🇷🇸🇪🇫🇮
Kreikkalainen has to be the most badass way of saying a nationality I've ever seen. That just does something to make my brain happy
Release the kreikkalainen!
ÆÆÆKCENT
Röd gröd med flöde
Kamelåså
EA Sport se on pelissä
@@Kornchipzzz YES
@@adryxele9080 KAMELÅÅÅÅÅSÅ
Finland is like the adopted brother who's very close family now, and Iceland is the little Brother who was your closest friend, then moved out and made a name for himself, then surpassed you in some things, and to your dismay, started listening to Denmark's favourite music instead of yours. Love you both!
Judging from your comment Sweden is your little unmanly brother you are embarrassed to mention.
@Patridge Denmark is older.
Finland would actually be an adopted sister
Finland is like the adopted sibling who is supposed to shovel the shit.
Who is the weirder sibling, is it Iceland or Finland?
To be fair, "I love you" in Finnish doesn't sound like "I love you" in Finland either. That's why no one ever says it.
But they say the word Rakas meaning as "beloved" one more right?
😂
@@sami-9233 dude, the joke are the finns are so badass they dont say they love someone, but just show it like a badass warrior of old does
@@nfspbarrister5681 To us it carries so much weight that it is not a word you easily say.
The first thing I learned in Finnish was "Minä rakastan sinua." So I went around saying it to everyone.
I am italian, and reading the comments i probably am the only one here.
I am so curious and fascinated by your culture. I ve been to danmark and sweden , enjoyed every moment of my holiday there , love the places, food, people.
Cheers dear Scandinavian friends!
That’s such a nice thing to say! Cheers dear Italian friend, from Sweden 🇸🇪
Thank you. As a Dane I have always been greeted with kindness from Italians, you have a beautiful and hospitable culture.
From Finland:This was so funny I had to go to another room and laugh loud because my wife was sleeping!😂😂😂👍
Miguel Sandels Eres español??? When finns happen to say "mina rakastan sinua" it does sound like they're gonna murder you while you sleep!!! Luckily, they say it like once every 3 years 😅 phew!
You know what it means in finnish right? xD It sounds like that to other people??? XD
pilorin ooommmgggg xdddd but true tho
So true. I was watching while in bed, with my headphones, but I started to laugh and I woke my wife ... and I’m Brazilian 🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣
I want find a Finnish man to tell me “I love you” immediately.
- love from Australia.
In Finland we don't use such expressions, except perhaps while being drunk. Minä rakastan sinua.
I mean he'll tell you he loves you all right.
In English. :P
Haven't you heard? He will tell you that on the day he marries you. If that changes he will let you know.
@@JR-mr9td in Finland we don't really express any emotions, without being a few drinks in.
@@takoen_taotaan Just like Germans (That's why we really like beer)
haha, danish accent is spot on
I know! Haha all my Danish friends sound exactly like that xD
It is absolutely spot on for - if they suck. Mostly my parents generation and the less educated.
The funny thing is, I have a Danish friend who once, many years ago, tried to convince me that when he went to England everyone thought he was a local. And he demonstrated his shitty English accent. I had no idea how to tackle that situation... so I just nodded.
Try having english classes with 30 other danes... Some people are so convinced they are rocking amazing british accents when they all in fact sound like in this video
Indeed, it's the Copenhagen accent though which is also the one Swedes always joke about when they mock our language. It's clear that most of them have only ever been to Copenhagen, which is understandable I suppose. I guess most people visiting France also just visit Paris etc.
You can immediately identify the Copenhagen accent if you're from another part of Denmark as well.
The Swedes always use the excessive use of 'soft D' from Copenhagen a lot when they make fun of the Danish language for example. It's true enough but it just doesn't go for other parts of the country. The word "meget" (a lot/very) is basically pronounced like "Maard" (soft D) in Copenhagen which it isn't elsewhere for example. You don't get people in Southern Jutland, the west coast etc. saying "maard" so the stereotype doesn't really go for them. They still have both an accent and a dialect of course but it's not at all like the Copenhagen one, not even close. :)
There's something about his Danglish accent that screams Copenhagen to me but I'm not really sure what it is. Maybe it's the "rhythm" or something, but you wouldn't get that kind of sound in Aalborg, Aarhus, Esbjerg, Odense or whatever. It's very clearly Copenhagen-English.
Finnish. One of the few languages that makes Klingon sound like the language of milk drinkers.
then you can't really have listened to a longe stretch of it an addition to 'rakastan'. It is possible to say it quite softly, not like he does at all. It is a bit like Italian, suitable for singing.
Klingon is not a national language.
Russian language looks Klingon 😂😂😂
I went to Denmark once, thinking I actually could speak the language perfectly. It was so embarrassing when everyone looked at me like a mad man, Which is especially embarrassing since Danish is a mad mans language! I dont think I can ever show my face in Denmark ever again.
I would speak to you - not difficult to understand, if you speak like Ari :)
Är det sant?
icelandic danish was way easier to understand than actual danish. the way your people pronounce letters somehow makes danish more understandable for norwegians
How I feel when I say my horses name in Danish (he’s from Iceland) it’s really embarrassing
come back we already miss you
I’m Taiwanese. I’ve never even been to a Nordic country and I still find this guy funny.
I'm from India lol and I still found it funny.
When Chinese people from elsewhere hear Taiwanese Hokkien they wonder if they've gone insane
I'm Swedish and I can officially say that I love, love, love all my Nordic Neighbours including the Faroe Islands. We make fun of each other and we need our differences but we also share a history, we all have a deep rooted democracy and we live in the best part of the world that suit us, I think. ❤️
Man, I think it's sweet as well, even though feels like us Finns end up watching all that camaradery with binoculars like 'look at all those Scandinavians having fun' :D:D
Grøønland quetly stands on a side and decides to unite Polish and Japanese flags...
@@NuorvaJ Man, you're in there as well, even if we have to drag you into it kicking and screaming (because you're from Finland).
You are part of it.
Greetings from Sweden
Us danish people grew up with swedish culture.. Emil og Pippi er ligeså elsket i Danmark som i Sverige ..
We also have the national banners with the cross, special for us!
Two Finns go to a bar. They get their drink and sit down. After 10 minutes one says to the other 'Nice bar isn't it'. 30 minutes later the other replies.. 'Did we come here to drink or just talk'?
The other one replied ''yeah can you pull it out of my bumhole now''
Hahahhahahahaha!!!
😂😂😂😂😂
Here's the original text: To svenskere sidder i en hytte og drikker, på et tidspunkt siger den ene: 'skål', hvortil den anden svarer: 'Fan, skal vi drycka eller prata skit'?
@@hassegreiner9675Inte Finska?
Went to Denmark as a Dutch person, reading wasn't super difficult, lots of similarities with Dutch, but then they started to speak and I was lost as soon as they opened their mouth.
I'm from Mecklenburg and worked 10 Month in Netherland at the German border - learned the regional dialekt in 3 month - through my own low german dialect. Tried this in Sweden afterwards, by working there for 4 month. Could understand nearly 80% - Speak maybe 10%, by the end. Now I live in Switzerland for 5 Years, after 3 weeks I could understand nearly everything - can just speak 5 sentences today in this dialects... Can't really figure out, how this "learning germanic languages /dialects" really works...
By the way: I still love The Netherlands, I have a lot of good memories of the time there!
That's rich coming from someone who's language sounds like having a constant seizure
@@elbruhmomentonumerodos9227 You mean Dutch? Id have to agree. I'm Dutch myself but when I switch back from English to Dutch it takes me a while to gather myself 😂
@@elbruhmomentonumerodos9227 Don't you dare insult the precious Dutch language. It's the sweetest thing to listen to ever! -- Sincerely, a German
as a danish person, the feeling is perfectly mutual
I remember I was playing a game of Among us, and I just started talking icelandic. And some Danes and swedes understood me and replied in their own language. We weren't talking the same language yet we communicated with each other perfectly.
Sleepy boi
I heard a Bulgarian and a Serb do it.
Thats the power of roots
I love that. I'm an American who was studying Icelandic for a while and was able to understand my cousin when he texted me in Norwegian. It's so amazing how connected all the Nordic languages are.
I thought Icelandic and Faroese aren't quite as mutually intelligible with the other Nordic languages, but I guess they are after all.
@@baboowam23 You mean that's the power of Amogus.
that was almost too good Finnish for outsider
And for insider
Icelandic is relatively monotonic and tends to emphasize the first syllable of a word just like the not related at all finnish.
Icelanders in the other nordic countries have a tendency to be mistaken for finns by non-speakers of either language.
and this works the other way.
once I had a finnish girl read me a passage from an Icelandic book.
It was creepily accurate.
He may be a closet-Fingol
Icelandic and Finnish have a very similar phonology, we pronounce letter mostly the same way, and Icelandic also often has the stress on the first syllable, similar to Finnish.
Until he attempted to pronounce mäkäräinen.
I'm a half Spanish half Venezuelan from Madrid, never been anywhere further north than Germany, and I still loved and laughed out loud at this hahaha I guess humor has no frontiers
LOL..oh gosh, this guy is funny! His pronounciation when swearing in Finnish is really good! >D
Pronounciation is not that good
Hehe the Finish death metal version of the Macerena.
As a dane, i refuse to believe anyone from Denmark is unaware of their horrible danglish accent!
bjoern007 actually school children in Denmark have a pretty good accent. For the most...
Since I've lived in Britian for almost two years, I would hope the worst of my danglish have vanished ;) :)
If you are from Denmark then you would know plenty of Danes have lost a lot of their accent. Especially younger generations. I mean I haven't but I have a lot of friends with almost no accent what so ever. It is not like I can't hear Danish accent either, my parents sound really weird in English.
dÄnglish*
They are
I am Arab. Totally unrelated linguistically, but find this extremely funny. One, for the comedic part of it. Second, for Arabs judge each other the same way. Not only, countries, but cities or even parts of the city. I think this is common among nationalities with diverse dialects.
Hah! We hungarians just hate each other.
Like everyone on the train looks at each other angry/distant, but as soon as you ask if you could sit beside someone, they become very kind.
except the scandinavians are actually related to each other genetically. While "arabs" aren't. Arab speakers from the levant are completely different. Lebanese people are white. So you're not the same people by far.
Jesus, I'm Ukrainian, but I've never laughed harder in my life!!! And sure, I'll have your money by Wednesday.
Це і Макарена - топ)
Самое интерестное, что темпераменты наших и северных народов очень схожие, и много вещей , теже языки (Украина, Россия, Беларусь) тоже возникают смешные конфузы)
Lol.
hmm i dint even smirk
As a russian, I have to say, finnish language actually does sound badass!
It's honestly nice to know, since i don't have much good experience about Russians :/ Nice that there are people like u.
Also to lessen the confusion, I just took that as a compliment lol
@@olivial5142 hey! russia is big, we are just all so different. I am from Saint-Petersburg for example and we are all almost identical to Finns) same mentality, same culture, only different language.
@@jaykjellberg5274 happy to hear that:)
Great. We are also (secretly, very secretly) admiring Russian language
That mild clapping was actually a standing ovation by the nordic standards. 😀 (and i mean it as a compliment) i am Slavic, by the way and have noooo idea how I got here🤭 but, boy is that a universal situation with the related languages...😂
As a Dane, watching this is like being kicked in the balls by a younger, often bullied, sibling.
It doesn't hurt less just because you deserve it ...
There’s no good way to get kicked in the nuts
As a Dane, that's the best description of how I felt watching the video I've seen so far, despite the fact that I'm not even a man, lol.
@@Smoove_Jthere are loads of great ways
I'm Russian and i want more English language Scandinavian comedy!
You should check Finnish comedian Ismo, or swedish comedian Fredrik Andersson. The latter only have a few videos in english but really good, and Ismo have alot
@@andersmalmgren6528 What's the name of this comedian?
@@KatalinaKristina the islandic one in the video? Ari Eldjárn
Ari Eldjárn is on Netflix, too, I keep going back to his show there because he's so funny in it. He has worked on these jokes here since and the show is sooo good :)
Nasztrovjé!!!!!
This guy is brilliant
I just want to know how I got here... I'm Nigerian
...wrong turn at the atlantic? :D
Migrationsverket
Globalists let you in
Probably through Sweden.
@@-RXB- aldrig har jag sett en sån bra kommentar som din
Non-Scandinavians: "Scandinavia is so cool. Such different, diverse countries but they still speak sort of similarly enough to have a basic comprehension of what they mean."
Fins: "Yeah, we don't do that here."
*Thousands of miles in the distant Ural region between mountains, lakes and towers of ice*
Finno-Ugric ancestor: "I feel you, brother."
Finland isn't a part of Scandinavia, nor is Iceland ;)
And the Finns speak Swedish as well...
@@MrPicky - They're considered part of Scandinavia culturally either way. The "cross flag countries". I'm Danish and whenever anyone I've known have talked about Scandinavia, that has included Iceland and Finland.
@@VelkanAngels well you must then be a part of the younger generation that is more influenced by English culture. I see this in the younger generation in Iceland as well. Many of them think we are a part of Scandinavia.
Even though that we share similar culture, lifestyle and flags (the cross) that still does not make all of us Scandinavian.
And technically then Denmark isn't even a part of Scandinavia but is included "for old times sake" 😉
Other northern countries: NOOO you can’t just speak a whole different language 😭😭
Finns: Don’t care 🗿
Estonians: 🤷🏻♂️
@@ariccua6101 Estonia isn't a nordic country tho
@@dasdasdaxzvea Yeah cause Estonia is Baltic.
@@dasdasdaxzvea It is in my heart 😌
@@dasdasdaxzvea Yeah but it embraces some Nordic heritage and takes part in Nordic events.
As a Scotsman this video and the comments has been brilliant for learning all the different Nordic stereotypes you guys have for each other 🤣
A Finn here. When I lived in the UK I had a flatmate from Scotland. Thick borders she spoke. Initially, no idea what she was saying. After I a while I decided to pretend she's speaking Swedish/Norwegian sort of thing, and ta-dah, all perfectly clear. :D
@@LaughinLlama There are plans to annex Scotland as part of the Nordic countries once they declare independance
"saatana perkele vittu mäkäräinen..." never in my life has been i offended by something that is so deadly accurate and true :D
I have no idea what that means but your comment still made me chuckle.
@@Lugmillord Saatana = Satan
Perkele = Goddamnit
Vittu = Literally translates to cunt, but in this context it means something more like fuck
Mäkäräinen = Blackfly
@@lifeofabronovich7792 haha, Finnish swearing sounds badass
@@Lugmillord Haha, I don't even speak Finnish (I'm American), I just happen to know those few words
he did the "Norwegian" octave jump he was talking about to give thanks to his audience, true man of the people here
How times change. Any nordic meeting a swede: he must have corona, he must have corona
Yeah they didn't handle the pandemic that well.. True that.
I just watched an Danish/Swedish news about Sweden and Finland, they speaked about how/why Finland handled the pandemic so well compared to Sweden.
😹
🤣
That one is luckily gone sometime next year when the pandemic is dead, even in the US.
Dave Cullins We don’t know the time that this pandemic is gone
Actually I thought his Icelandic Danish was much easier to comprehend than actual Danish :)
You should try to find samples of Gøtudanskt (the Faroese dialect of Danish.. or rather Danish pronounced as Faroese).
Being Danish I understand both. but then I do also understand Swedish perfectly - and that's not the case for all Danes :)
@@Rovarin wait isnt farore island Norwegian?
@@legendteigen461 Well, in a sense it could be argued (though only by crazy historians) that the Faroes are what remains of the old Norwegian Realm. The Faroes were a taxland to Norway since the early middle ages, but were awarded by the Brits to the Danish king as personal property (along with Iceland and the colony of Greenland) at the treaty of Kiel, when the Dano-Norwegian Realms were sundered. Mainland Norway was awarded to Sweden, the Norwegians rebelled and a new Norwegian kingdom in union with Sweden was established.
@@Rovarin ah ok so it was the Norwegians that Discovered it but then the danish got the Islands?
I love Nordic people. Always when i meet people from Denmark, Norway, Sweden we have a good time. Of course we drink a lot. Greetings from Finland perkele. Swedish cannot drink:D
your alien overlord they’re rare
@your alien overlord 10 million Swedes, 6 million Danes and 6 million Norwegians. 350,000 Icelanders. Why are you surprised?
@your alien overlord you responded! yay! As an American I'm illiterate and unintelligible in several languages. ;p Hearing Nordics make these comparisons is pretty cool
@@squirlmy I had to check this. Always thought that Finland was bigger than Norway. Norway has 5,4million, and Finland 5,6million.
@@johanneskoskela384 Norja taitaa olla menossa ohi, tosin islamisoitumisesta johtuen 😐
Swedish: Easy mode
Norwegian: Normal mode
Danish: Hard mode
Icelandic: Extreme mode
Finnish: God mode
Swedish, Norweigan, Danish and even Icelandic is about the same hardness. The languages are so similar. Finnish is another story tho
😂😂😂😂
interesting so i have to learn Swedish and Finnish
Spot on
Well, Finnish and Estonian are very similar. We say 'Mina armastan sind' and Finnish say 'Mina rakastan sinua' as 'I love you'. 🇫🇮🇪🇪
@Levent A As a Finn, they are a lot similar. Also, in Finnish 'armas' is a synonym for 'rakas' ('beloved' in English).
Also Estonian word "rahakoti" is "a wallet" and in Finnish the word is "lompakko", but in Finnish raha means money and koti means home so it will be understand.("moneyhome") (Also my personal opinion rahakoti sounds so cute as a finn)
@@vop4813 Yes, 'raha' means 'money' in both languages. Home is 'kodu' in Estonian. 'Kott' is 'bag' in Estonian. So 'rahakott' is 'moneybag' aka wallet. There are also 'seljakott' (backbag), 'käekott' (handbag), 'vöökott' (belt bag) etc. We can form so many different compound words in both Finnish and Estonian. Your K, P, T are pronounced like our G, B, D. I think that's the most important thing to know while learning either language. And by the way, Duolingo just dropped their Finnish course and I'm almost halfway done already 😆
@@carleryk yhank you for your long aswer! Kiitos! Iy is nice to learn new things and sorry that I write the 'kott' incorrectly. I just have forgot it and google transalte wasn't that good help. First time I heard the word rahakott from a tv when I was wisiting Estonia!
@Levent A Yes they are. Like Spanish and Portuguese.
I don’t know much of anything about Scandinavia but this seemed really wholesome and like everyone could enjoy it. Thanks Iceland man
I'm jealous that a country can have a stand-up event with the performer speaking a non-native language and the crowd understands... wish the US would push at least a second for us to learn in school.
I thought you learn spanish in school...
@@silviu7568 Spanish is an elective class here, not required to take.
And I would like to suggest that the second language you should be thaught should be ASL (American Sign Language)! (I think that should be done here in Sweden [but with Swedish Sign Language, of course] as well.) - Sign languages are cool!
Though, on second thoughts, I'm not sure this is such a good idea - just look at the tensions between the Finnish and Finnish-Swedish speaking populations, and how they are intensified because schools are required to teach "the other's" language. It's not super pretty. :/
And requirement like this would have to come from a deep desire within the community itself, and then - why make it a requirement?
@@silviu7568
In the US, at least where I live, if you want to go to college you need at least 3 (Recommended 4) years of math in High School, 2 years of foreign language or 1 year of an art, 4 years of English/Language Arts, 2 years (recommended 3) of science, 2 years (recommended 3) of history, 2 years of PE, and there are multiple available electives. There are also options for Advanced placement, AVID, and Honors. AP is the only one to give college credit before college the others just look good on a resumé.
As a Finn it's cool that the other Nordic languages are so similar! I could actually follow my coffee maker's cleaning instructions that were written in Norwegian based on my Swedish knowledge (which is not that impressive to begin with).
Can finish people understand estonians and hungarians?
I’m just a curious french guy…
@@maxrolland3148 Estonian a little, hungarian no chance. I've heard that estonians can understand finnish better than vice versa since to them finnish sounds like a weird ancient version of their own language.
@@ikkimi7745
Thanks
@@ikkimi7745 Interesting, that's a similar situation to Icelandic and Norwegian then, as I've heard Norwegians sometimes can struggle with the "Old Norse" vibe of Icelandic, but the Icelanders don't struggle so much in the opposite direction.
@@maxrolland3148 more estonian and less hungarian but there are suprisingly many words that sound the same. J’ai oublié quand je regardais cet video, Je parles français aussi.
I'm Italian and I'm singing Saatana perkele vittu makarainen all day long. They just seem the right words.
I honestly think that if this guy works on a new routine in English, that he could easily do Las Vegas. He has the talent and the charisma, and he knows how to deliver lines. I would pay to see him. I think that he has star quality.
I'm Irish and I always wondered where this unusual friendliness came from..... The vikings
Nah I think it's just the alcohol to be honest
Vikings were mostly traders and could be very accepting of different cultures (that weren't Scandinavian) because they were good opportunities to learn from.
Let's not pay attention to the vikings that raided a village in Ireland and took the women to Iceland.
I've always thought that the Irish were/are QUITE friendly, definitely including the more Celtic segment of the population. The Welsh are great folks as well, and the Scots are intense. The English are the aristocrats, yeah, yeah...
I think that Germanic and Slavic folks are often more "detatched" on the whole, compared to most other sorts of folks. Particularily with regard to the Northern German-Swedish scientists, philosophers, researchers and scholars, etc. kind of deal. Professors, etc. Finns just don't always say a whole lot, little bit different kind of deal there, but something you'll see in surrounding Baltic countries, Russia, Poland, Sweden as well, etc. Danes are friendly and chatty and Norwegians are somewhere between Scots and Danes. Southern Europeans def. put themselves out there more, absolutely.
Being half German (Bavarian, Swiss German, some Swabian, Hessian/Thuringian, and a bit of Saxon), yep, my fellow German-Americans (and Germans back in the old country) are tough on the outside, generally much warmer on the inside, once you get past the sometimes rather prickly exterior. Thrifty, tenacious, and driven. And boy, whatever it is that we work on, WE WORK HARD!!!!
My other side is Scot/Welsh/English. Particularly Scottish-English border, but also some Welsh-English border. Very traditional Christian/LDS, very conservative, 10 commandments, little bit more choir and politeness/etiquette/courtesy stuff, compared to the more poker faced, say what you mean Germans. Lots of imagination, musical/artsy stuff, etc. yes.
The Scandinavians are not quite as "grim" or "exacting" as the Germans on the whole (perfectionistic, persnickety, deep thinking, philosophical, etc., that stuff is def. more of a Scot/German thing), wih the exception of some of those Swedes, Finns, etc. maybe. I just see the northerners as being a bit "goofier" than Germans, more often than not. But about as equally macabre/exploring "weirdland" type stuff, as both the English and Germans, Scots, etc., at least, for some. Some Edgar Allen Poes out there in Scand., thats for sure...
But yeah, the Irish are awesome. 😊😊😊
@@BenjaminGessel Being a Dane myself I've gotta say that is quite an apt description(especially with regards to Danes and other Nordic peoples), well done!
@@elbruhmomentonumerodos9227 😁😁😁👍👍
Of course this being said, everyone wants to believe that the Vikings were all huge, blonde, rougher, macho sorts. Not just Mel Gibson, but most of humanity prob. No doubt many were, plus red/brown hair, little bit of dark brown/black hair, etc., but I think there is more truth to the blonder genes among Scandinavians now and back then, than to everyone being over 6 ft., etc. But yeah, Denmark rules. 😁😁😁😁👍👍👍
Oh my god I’m Mexican and that part of the Macarena being invented in Finland is the best thing I’ve heard!! i had to rewind 3 times to listen to the end without laughing 😂
Makkarainen, ai saatana 😂😂😂
Repesin XD
Anna Emilie XD Repesin ku luin tän
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂👍
Italian native speaker here. Finnish sounds very melodic to my ears. I especially love how they pronounce vowels. I look up to you, my dear Scandinavian friends, for your rich culture and for being able to preserve it.
dane here. My absolute favorite place to visit is italy. Such rich culture and foods, and im not even a food guy - this changes when im in italy. People drive like crazy though :D
@@jonaswox happy to hear that you like my country. And yes, you are right, we drive like crazy.... especially in the South 😱
I'm a Finn and my favourite language is Italian and I speak some of it, it sounds so melodic. Our languages actually have some similarities like in the way words are pronunced. Saluti dalla Finlandia ❤
@@sonjass8657 saluti a te! I'd love to visit Finland!
@@jonaswoxItaly has Art and beauty, more than food:). But unfortunately it's overcrowded
As a guy from Eastern Europe I find it weird that I understood almost everything. Must be all the Scandinavian metal I’ve been listening to 🤘😜
me, an American: *I don't feel like I should be here*
Go away Yank, this is the European side of UA-cam. You're in the wrong hood.
@@Sirius1914 Ok. Just don't mention to Putin, that we are leaving.
Don't worry about it, we let anyone in, including ex-ISIL warriors.
Yeah but that has never stopped America has it.
@@smalltimer666 millions of Americans are from countries that either Europe or the U.S. itself have invaded babes 😩
As a dane, I must admit that his danglish accent is almost spot on. Funny guy indeed!
When he mentioned that Danes think they sound like a native English speaker I really felt that.
To be fair Danish people don't have an egg scent.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
No that would be Seth Efricans
So Danes are Southerners? (U.S)
For a sec I was like, what, do the other countries eat a lot of eggs? Lol
what am I doing here and why did I find this funny I'm Mexican American
chicken nugget Omg same I'm from Southeast Asia
chicken nugget It's the power of the internet, you know. :) love from Finland.
I found this kind of funny. Hes my half cousin so I have heard alot of jokes that he says lol
Yo también, pero creo que UA-cam me recomendó este vídeo porque solo veo videos de idiomas extranjeros
Haha 😂
I find it amazing when people enjoy/get lost on odd parts of Yt
As an Englishman it sounds like you guys have the same sense of brotherhood and rivalry that the UK has with Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Love it, long may it continue. Greetings and best wishes from your North Sea neighbours. :)
umm... no. We (Australians) don't feel a sense of "brotherhood" with the UK. with NZ (+Samoa, Tonga, Fiji, etc) and Americans maybe, that's it.
@@SocialDemocrat1789 you guys are literally brits tho (historically) how can you guys not be allied to us? why do you hate us? you have our system of government, our language, our scientific discoveries (well the whole world does but i digress), places and buildings over there are named after us, your comedy is like ours, you basically stole the london rap scene recently (as new age australian rap wouldn't exist without us, don't think we didn't notice) etc. we have so much in common why the hell would we not be brothers?
@@ugh4387 lmao it's funny to watch this all as an Indian
Johnathan Cauldwell,
Leave us American's out of any squabblings. ...
@@ugh4387 look at a map
3:15 In actual fact: The complete elven language that Tolkien created for the Lord Of the Rings was entirely based on Finnish grammer.
Tolkien thought that it was one of the most beautifully & logically constructed languages grammatically...So may he has a point here.
4:15 I mean come on: "I love you"- Minerakas Da Sin-varr(No idea if that is even remotely close to how that is spelled) Still that sounds like something from a cool fantasy world
It's "Minä rakastan sinua" :)
Eh, close enough :D
@@sairhug In Northern Sami language "I love you" is "Mun rahkestan du". Finnish language has its sibling in the Northern part of Scandinavia/Norden.
Tolkien's Elvish is actually two dialects. The Quenya dialect is based on Finnish and the Sindarin dialect is based on Welsh. Both are amazing languages and sound so unique, I don't blame him for being impressed enough to use them for his elvish languages.
how to make to make delicious fruit wine in finland: put two raisins in a wooden barrel, add 30L of vodka, let it sit for two full sauna sessions, enjoy , if too fruity, skip the raisins, good for 80 swedes or 6 finns...
A while ago I listened to a Danish radio programme for over half an hour, just for entertainment, even though I couldn't understand almost anything. I just enjoyed the sounds. XD -A Finn
Wow, you are actually immune to torture!
...all in good fun :Þ
Haha, I've actually done that with finnish. Love your language! - A Norwegian
@@missdead1 Hahah, I wonder if that was sarchastic or not. 😆 But yeah, Finnish indeed is a special language and not only in how it sounds (like Danish) but also in grammar and vocabulary.
Did the same last month. Didn't understand anything either. - A German
I also like listening to Danish and Swedish but there aren't many motives for someone to learn them.
That his whole act fits in 5:40 is the most nordic thing ever in existence
It’s because at 6, the sun goes down.