Can Nordic Countries Understand Each Other? l Norway, Sweden, Denmark l FT. WOOSEOK, KINO

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  • Опубліковано 4 чер 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 431

  • @saakawithaG
    @saakawithaG 20 днів тому +508

    Nordic = Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden
    Scandinavian = Denmark, Norway, Sweden

    • @wdvnge
      @wdvnge 20 днів тому +27

      I think like half of us finns dont understand this fact. Its a small thing but it annoys me 😄

    • @KurtFrederiksen
      @KurtFrederiksen 20 днів тому +7

      @@wdvnge If you don't know the reason, it's hard to make sense of. It's not really intuitive to think of Denmark as a Scandinavian Country when it's not part of the Scandinavian Peninsula and far more reasonable to think Finland is.
      If you don't know about the Danish/Swedish wars, the shared protolanguage, the shared culture , and the political movement to reunite the three countries it makes little sense.

    • @Foreignmonk34
      @Foreignmonk34 20 днів тому +5

      @@KurtFrederiksen yeah, propably half of the American people don't know Scandinavia or Nordic countries are a part of Europe, so it's not that surprising

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 19 днів тому +1

      @@KurtFrederiksen And it's very new and arbitrary too.

    • @KurtFrederiksen
      @KurtFrederiksen 19 днів тому +1

      @@Foreignmonk34 You have to make allowances for the US Americans. There's a Scandinavia in Wisconsin. There are 17 places in the world name Denmark. The US have 15 places called Denmark in the states, 1 in Australia and the original in Scandinavia.
      It sure weren't the most innovative people who left for the colonies back in the days. New York, New England, New Holland, New London, London in Ohio and so on.
      States with Cities named Denmark in America:
      Wisconsin, Virginia, Tennessee, South Carolina, Oregon, Ohio, New York, Mississippi, Maine, Kansas, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Georgia, and Arkansas
      There are 6 places named Sweden in America and there are 15 places named Norway in America.

  • @victorm6430
    @victorm6430 17 днів тому +70

    As a Swede, this is probably the first time I've understood more Danish than Norwegian. The Danish was surprisingly easy to comprehend, while the Norwegian sounded like mumbling, making it difficult to catch every word she said.

    • @matematikniels
      @matematikniels 16 днів тому +9

      Danish is easy to understand when we pronounce clearly. Which we never do

  • @IdaMariaBaek
    @IdaMariaBaek 20 днів тому +213

    Hiii everyone!!
    My name is Ida, and I’m the Danish girl in the video! ❤️
    Thank you so much for watching 🥰

    • @mari97216
      @mari97216 19 днів тому +16

      Hey, you were easy to understand! Thanks for speaking clear and slow. ❤️ from Norway🇳🇴

    • @Hrng270
      @Hrng270 19 днів тому +8

      You're loved here and out from here by me 💋💕, take care yourself for the good on South Korea.
      Love to Denmark 🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰and to you 🇩🇰💕💋

    • @jackhye7785
      @jackhye7785 19 днів тому +3

      Danish here as well. Was so cool to see how the japanese guys were reacting to every country and the different things about it :D

    • @NicoDiAngelo_pjo
      @NicoDiAngelo_pjo 19 днів тому +6

      @@jackhye7785just so you know they are korean not japanese

    • @jackhye7785
      @jackhye7785 18 днів тому +2

      @@NicoDiAngelo_pjo haha my bad. But still amazing none the less 🙌😁 Thanks for the correction

  • @lea.xinghui
    @lea.xinghui 20 днів тому +457

    I am Norwegian and I didn't even understand what the Norwegian person said. Ngl I understood the danish and Swedish person better.

    • @paulruano1903
      @paulruano1903 20 днів тому +70

      Yeah, she mumbling little bit with an accent.
      And she even mixed in some english words.
      But the swede also added english word.
      Its like todays generation is so deep into social medias etc.
      . That they can not speak 100% their own language.

    • @lol69970
      @lol69970 20 днів тому +39

      Same, as a swedish person I understood the Dane better than the Norwegian.

    • @lol69970
      @lol69970 20 днів тому +40

      @@paulruano1903 Eh, it's not like they can't. I'm Swedish and I can definitely speak my own language without adding English words. Social media affects us, sure, but it does not remove our ability to speak. It's just slang, that's all.

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe 20 днів тому +44

      Yeah she was very hard to understand even when she spoke English. So hard to understand that I wondered if she was born in Norway or if she is an immigrant. It looked like she barely understood Swedish and Danish as well. The danish girl was more intelligible and that is coming from a Swede. 😆

    • @Kooczsi
      @Kooczsi 20 днів тому +5

      @@johnnorthtribe i feel like if she wanted to be more intelligible (danish person), she should have pronounced words like "sammenhold" differently. She pronounced it like "samnhold", often skipping vowels

  • @Henrik46
    @Henrik46 20 днів тому +170

    The Norwegian girl said several incorrect things. The red russ are the generalists. They can study anything in university. The blue russ are basically the same, except they had more subjects relating to business. Only red/blue qualify for higher learning. Correct: The black russ are trade school grads. She left out the green russ, which graduate from agricultural school.

    • @bloodyfitnerd1947
      @bloodyfitnerd1947 20 днів тому +12

      Also said you have to graduate to be able to party/russefest(which i assume means be a russ), which is wrong.

    • @aanonidance
      @aanonidance 20 днів тому +8

      Also-black and green russ can go on to study after trade school if they just take a couple extra high school courses, the system is made so that anyone can take higher education in the end if they want! Some times i regret not becoming black russ as you both learn a trade, and can go to university after, i think that's a great idea.

    • @BirkAxarberi
      @BirkAxarberi 19 днів тому

      Blue russ doesn't really exist anymore. The economy specializing was removed when "Allmennfag" become "Studiespesialiserende" in 2006. You had to go economy to become a blue russ. If we gonna be real there is only red russ left the others are wannabes.

    • @Thrillseeker666
      @Thrillseeker666 19 днів тому +7

      She's not even Norwegian.

    • @lykketrolle06
      @lykketrolle06 19 днів тому +1

      Also, there is a party. For almost a month xD

  • @Krozmar
    @Krozmar 20 днів тому +84

    Norwegian girl.. NO! You can not sell it donate it or give away old relics you find.. Anything you find that date from before 1650 is state property, but you can get a finder fee for it.... And often you will get more value from that then the value of the actual item.. You can actually be punished by huge fines and even jail time if you dont turn in things you find..

  • @chalphon4907
    @chalphon4907 19 днів тому +76

    "Norway and Iceland are the same". No, no they're really not.

    • @isag.s.174
      @isag.s.174 17 днів тому

      Then why did she say it?

    • @kittycat5853
      @kittycat5853 17 днів тому

      You're absolutely right that they are not.

    • @AlexTheFruitcake
      @AlexTheFruitcake 17 днів тому

      We started out being the same. Before the 18th century, the nordics where 1 people. But because vikings learned about kings from the british, some of the nordic men wanted to be kings. That's how the 5 nordic countries became 5 people instead of 1.

    • @chalphon4907
      @chalphon4907 16 днів тому +1

      We were never one people, rather we were way more than five nations back in the day. Lots of local tribes with cultural differencies even in the viking era. Norway, Sweden, and Denmark were under one rule during the Kalmar union but that ended in the 15 hundreads.

  • @sara8614
    @sara8614 20 днів тому +116

    What is the Norwegian girl on about? She knows nothing about the russefeiring - red suits for "smart" people, blue for "nurses and doctors"?? 😂

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe 20 днів тому +38

      She seemed to not know anything about her country. Nor could she speak so a Swede understood her. Neither did she understand the danish and swedish girl.

    • @Kain81023
      @Kain81023 20 днів тому +25

      @@johnnorthtribe Maybe because she's not a Norwegian, only a girl living in Norway

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe 20 днів тому +1

      @@Kain81023 she can have been born and raised in Norway.

    • @bruker4230
      @bruker4230 20 днів тому +10

      @@johnnorthtribeshe is still from another country

    • @johnnorthtribe
      @johnnorthtribe 20 днів тому +10

      @@bruker4230 how can she be from another country if she was born in Norway?

  • @silje8711
    @silje8711 20 днів тому +131

    I'm from Norway and I'm pretty sure it's illegal to sell stuff you find that's from the viking age.

    • @The-Vega-Islands
      @The-Vega-Islands 20 днів тому +19

      Yeah objects from before 1537 and coins from before 1650 belongs to the government,even if it is found on your own property. (Kulturminneloven)

    • @Asa...S
      @Asa...S 20 днів тому +11

      Yeah, here in Sweden, anything you find that's from before 1850 you have to give to the government, and if they think it's historically valueble, they have to pay you for it, or give it back. Then you can sell it if you like. But items from the viking age they will buy. Some old nails or shards from later date, then probably not.

    • @siljafugleberg804
      @siljafugleberg804 20 днів тому +8

      Yes, I'm Norwegian and study archaeology and you have to deliver it to the "fylkes arkeologen" the county archaeologist or the state, if you find something that are over 100 years old.

    • @95angel100
      @95angel100 18 днів тому +1

      Can you actually get charged if you find something like that and decide to keep it due to not knowing this law and someone sees and reports it?

    • @Asa...S
      @Asa...S 18 днів тому

      @@95angel100 I haven't heard of any case like that, but generally speaking, ignorance of a law, can't be used as a defence when a crime has been committed.
      Keeping an ancient artifact will, according to the law in Sweden, lead to fines, or prison for up to 6 months.

  • @Asa...S
    @Asa...S 20 днів тому +39

    5:45
    Swede: Hello. What should we say? Talk in your own languages. How did you get here today?
    Norwegian: Here?
    Swede: Yes, how did you get here today?
    Dane: How did you get here today?
    Swede: Did you take the train?
    Norwegian: I did take a plane.
    Dane: Today?
    Swede: A plane? Here? Today?
    Norwegian: I took the bus here, and the train.

  • @peacefulminimalist2028
    @peacefulminimalist2028 20 днів тому +115

    90% of what the Norwegian girl said was wrong. Also no idea why she mentions metal detectors instead of fjords.

    • @HolgerDanske874
      @HolgerDanske874 16 днів тому +11

      She is not Norwegian, but immigrant

    • @peacefulminimalist2028
      @peacefulminimalist2028 16 днів тому +9

      @@HolgerDanske874 She can still be Norwegian, that's not something you know.

    • @Anonymous-uw4sr
      @Anonymous-uw4sr 15 днів тому +3

      ​@@peacefulminimalist2028No. Norwegian is an ethnic group.

    • @hernicentwari85
      @hernicentwari85 15 днів тому +4

      @@HolgerDanske874bara för att hon immigrera så är hon inte mindre norsk. Hon är fortfarande norsk medborgare

    • @peacefulminimalist2028
      @peacefulminimalist2028 15 днів тому +1

      @@Anonymous-uw4sr If you're a Norwegian citizen you're per definition Norwegian. Period

  • @kyoheiablaza6070
    @kyoheiablaza6070 20 днів тому +105

    How many international PENTAGON and UNIVERSE fans are here to support WOOSEOK and KINO? 🖐️

  • @mari97216
    @mari97216 19 днів тому +31

    What was the Norwegian on about🙈
    Russ was wrong and she didn’t speak clearly in Norwegian at all. The Swede and Dane did. It was honestly easier to understand them as they were not mumbling.

    • @MaidenViking_
      @MaidenViking_ 16 днів тому +2

      She was talking dialect (trøndersk)

  • @wowJhil
    @wowJhil 20 днів тому +40

    Finally a chill person representing Sweden, that felt nice!

    • @grandmakida6591
      @grandmakida6591 20 днів тому +2

      thankssss haha - Kida

    • @DanielCohen-cv5qi
      @DanielCohen-cv5qi 19 днів тому

      @@grandmakida6591 Are you the Swedish from the video? If so, can I ask just of curiosity, you said your name is Magda, Is Magda a short form of Magdalena or Maria Magdalena?

    • @grandmakida6591
      @grandmakida6591 19 днів тому

      @@DanielCohen-cv5qi nope, it's just Magda~ I do get asked this a lot

  • @ragismundbjornansson8347
    @ragismundbjornansson8347 20 днів тому +90

    Why did the Norwegian girl say that Iceland and Norway is the same???😂 Like what is she on about!??😂😭

    • @mustplay7212
      @mustplay7212 20 днів тому +10

      Norway and Iceland are kinda the same. remember: people from Iceland are originally norwegians. Our roots are the same. Icelandic culture is probably more akin to western parts of Norway in terms of farming and fishing and such but culturally Norway and Iceland are very similar. Especially the historical parts of culture. The big difference is how norwegian "evolved" or absorbed other languages into it, like latin or other germanic languages. So in that sense we are the same but yeah i am not sure she knew what she was talking about. There are modern differences ofc but to say we are not the same is also kinda wrong.

    • @ragismundbjornansson8347
      @ragismundbjornansson8347 20 днів тому +18

      @@mustplay7212 Maybe, but the point is that they were talking about which countries they should visit and in what order, and she convinced them that Iceland and Norway was the same thing, which the last time I looked out the window, it was not...

    • @mustplay7212
      @mustplay7212 20 днів тому

      @@ragismundbjornansson8347 yeah i get that

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 19 днів тому +13

      @@mustplay7212 That was in the 870s though, close to 1200 years ago. Almost a bit like saying Ukraine/Russia and Sweden are the same just because the Kievan rus settlement was founded by Swedish vikings from Roslagen in Svealand (Sweden proper).

    • @visualdarkness
      @visualdarkness 19 днів тому +1

      I got no idea? Blondes and fish doesn't make the countries the same.

  • @domdominique2603
    @domdominique2603 20 днів тому +51

    My fave talkshow host is Frederik Skavlan (Norway). In one old episode of Skavlan, the guests were Mads Mikkelsen (Danish) and Stella Skarsgård. The three of them were talking in different languages but the banter was seamless. Amazing!

    • @DONTHASSLETHEHOFF
      @DONTHASSLETHEHOFF 20 днів тому

      He is a prick.

    • @ahkkariq7406
      @ahkkariq7406 20 днів тому +9

      Skavlan makes it a little easier for the Swedes. He does not speak Norwegian when he is on the show, he speaks "svorsk" svensk/norsk (swedish/norwegian).

    • @mari97216
      @mari97216 19 днів тому +5

      @@ahkkariq7406true but they would probably still be able to have a conversation even if he didn’t translate certain words. He speaks clear and slow already. But it would not be flowing as smooth (as I can imagine it did)

    • @NiklasMJ
      @NiklasMJ 19 днів тому +9

      @@ahkkariq7406 Also Mads Mikkelsen is fluent in Swedish and spoke Swedish throughout most of the interview.

    • @ahkkariq7406
      @ahkkariq7406 19 днів тому +3

      @@mari97216 I also think they probably would be able to have a conversation even if all of them had spoken their own language.

  • @i0Ie
    @i0Ie 20 днів тому +31

    They are enthusiastic about learning something new and curious about other cultures/nations and also it's so wonderful to see Kino and Wooseok together, please have them on your show more often!

  • @mahmamaa
    @mahmamaa 19 днів тому +15

    I'm from Norway and the girl from Norway has 20 % clue of what she is talking about. She gives you a lot of wrong information. We can't keep findings from the vikings, that belongs to the states.

  • @arcticblue248
    @arcticblue248 20 днів тому +52

    Actually here in Norway .. state own all archeological items you find, so if you find a coin or sword or whatever from Viking era ... you have to report it to government and they come and do a exevation of the site.

    • @user-lw8bv3ln9n
      @user-lw8bv3ln9n 20 днів тому +6

      Yes, it’s the same in Denmark, and I’d guess it’s the same in Sweden.

    • @DrPotatoX
      @DrPotatoX 20 днів тому +6

      @@user-lw8bv3ln9nYeah, it’s the same in Sweden

    • @omega1231
      @omega1231 20 днів тому +3

      In Denmark it has been like that since the 17th century, when absolutism was introduced everything became property of the king.

    • @mari97216
      @mari97216 19 днів тому +4

      Yess! Like the viking sword found a couple days ago in someones garden or property.

    • @elfa6846
      @elfa6846 18 днів тому +2

      Yes exactly, same here in Sweden

  • @Thrillseeker666
    @Thrillseeker666 19 днів тому +9

    You couldn't find an actual Norwegian to represent us?
    What's she saying about Nidarosdomen being a "viking graveyard" is nonsense, likewise with the "free for all" archeological finds. (They have to given over to archeologists).
    Where did you find this immigrant?

  • @STELLALLETS-qp6ts
    @STELLALLETS-qp6ts 20 днів тому +32

    Having PENTAGON together is one of the best things in my life. Thank you, AWESOME WORLD!!!
    edit:
    Seriously, their chemistry is so HYPED!!
    WOOSEOK during show: Milk, waffle waffle waffle dips cinnamon, culture with animation is the best, LEGO, this boy is sincerely funny and naive❤
    Swedish girl talking about lake:
    Kino: we can rent airbnb and swim ALOT.
    Wooseok: Are there DOLPHINS in the lake?🥹
    Wooseok's 7th time and Kino's 1st in this channel❤

    • @AnnaBanana_00
      @AnnaBanana_00 19 днів тому

      Wasn't it the swedish girl?

    • @STELLALLETS-qp6ts
      @STELLALLETS-qp6ts 19 днів тому +1

      @@AnnaBanana_00 fixed, I must had a brain fog when typing that. Thanks for letting me know

    • @AnnaBanana_00
      @AnnaBanana_00 19 днів тому

      @@STELLALLETS-qp6ts Yess, wouldn’t wanna get us mixed up with the Danes yk yk 💀💀🙏🏻

  • @SebHaarfagre
    @SebHaarfagre 19 днів тому +4

    You can not choose to "keep it or sell it" lol if you find Viking relics, it's not yours, by law.
    The Korean guy is 100% correct that it is illegal (what she says) 😅😅 Also it is not common at all to find these things (just like the rest of the world and their respective heritage sites).
    However, a 1000 year old sword was recently found in Norway (can't remember where) and remarkably it had partly or fully Frankish design (so either from conquest or from trading). The farmer - obviously - contacted the local police/authorities and it will be taken care of, restored and probably put in a museum.
    Cultural heritage is *NOT* for you to "keep or sell". Not even _close._

  • @paulruano1903
    @paulruano1903 20 днів тому +20

    If you FIND viking artifacts... it IS illegal to keep it.
    There are laws that give the STATE the legal rights to all such findings.
    So not illegal to look at your own property.
    But it is illegal to keep it. And illegal to sell for profit etc.
    So basicly the state will confiscate it all. And you get nothing.
    In addition, the state my turn your property into a dig site.
    So when you fibd something, it is best to not tell a soul. And try to put dirt on top of it as if never existed;)
    Because it can become a nightmare.
    And you would not even be able to sell your property, without mentioning it.
    And noone would buy your property... because it can become a nightmare to own (because of the state can do almost whatever they want when arvhelogically historical values are at play).

    • @paulruano1903
      @paulruano1903 20 днів тому +2

      And if you try to DESTROY the artifact? Oh boy then you are in derp troubles.
      Some have done that, and it can lead to massive fines.
      Not small misdemeanor fines, but very very high fines.
      So never tru to find such artifacts. It is never a good idea.
      If you think there is something... then either burry it without knowing anything about it... or sell your property beford knoeing about it.
      Because if you know about it, then you are legally obligated to mention it in the salesreport to potential buyers of property

    • @Asa...S
      @Asa...S 20 днів тому +5

      I don't know about Norway and Denmark, but in Sweden, you have to report it, but you will get paid, they won't just take confiscate it.
      "Inlösensersättning (I'm not sure how to translate this word, it's like "redemtion compensation") will be given for artifacts found during other circumstanced thatn in and by a ancient monument. The government has the right to be the first buyer, which means that the finder has to offer the state to buy the objects. The "redemtion compensation" is the full economic value of the object, and it's not tax exempt. Artifacts that the state doesn't want to pay for, is returned to the finder. The cultural historic value of the find is usually larger than it's economic value".

    • @StoltHD
      @StoltHD 19 днів тому

      @@Asa...S - It's the same in Norway, but if someone try to do something illegal, like selling it, the items will be confiscated and you get nothing... in addition to a high fine and/or prison.
      I think that is the same in Sweden and Denmark to... and most likely also in Finland.
      And in North of Norway, it's the same for any Sami artifacts older than 1900.

  • @MewDenise
    @MewDenise 20 днів тому +8

    I just love content like this. People from different countries learning about each other's cultures

    • @UnnoticedKIN
      @UnnoticedKIN 10 днів тому

      Hey, fancy seeing you here! =D

  • @susukidaisuki
    @susukidaisuki 18 днів тому +3

    As a Swede and a long time stan of PTG this made me super happy to see this interaction! Really hope they get to visit our Scandinavia 😍

  • @oh515
    @oh515 19 днів тому +4

    If you find historical artificial in Norway, you don’t get it. It belongs to the state. Before you start to search with a metal detector, you have to ask the owner of the land you want to search. If you find something of high value, you get 10% of the value of the mineral, or in SPECIAL cases you can get up to 10% of the general market value. It’s illegal to keep or bring the findings out of the country. I believe the Norwegian girl was just joking around. Anyway, it’s hard to find something of value. If it was as easy like she said, it would be farmers with metal detectors everywhere.

  • @KanaiyaSK
    @KanaiyaSK 20 днів тому +36

    As a norwegian, the norwegian girl didn't really sound very norwegian??? I don't think she is born and raised here.

  • @editsbyemilie
    @editsbyemilie 20 днів тому +4

    omg so much fun to watch!!! Love from Denmark 🇩🇰

  • @user-hs9oc3oo1q
    @user-hs9oc3oo1q 20 днів тому +5

    I think this program is really good cuz my favorite artists are coming out and I can get to know stories from many countries around the world. It's so fun😊 Kino and wooseok have good chemistry. I hope they come out again 🙏

  • @Framagic11
    @Framagic11 20 днів тому +14

    I just understand that we have Kino and Wooseok together and....aaaaaa.....awaaaa.... I'm so happy. Pentagon Pentagon Pentagoooooon🎉🎉🎉🩵🩵🩵

  • @thelmadis2321
    @thelmadis2321 20 днів тому +5

    Wooseok talking about Iceland makes me so happy please come to Iceland wooseok I will wait for you !!!

  • @zup3826
    @zup3826 20 днів тому +7

    OMG our PENTAGON maknaes 😍😍😍

  • @ejemima
    @ejemima 20 днів тому +2

    As a Dane, this was so fun and wholesome to watch. Thank you for making this 🥰 🇩🇰❤️🇰🇷

  • @eternalptgmx
    @eternalptgmx 20 днів тому +3

    Ah I just finished watching. This was so cute! I learned a lot! I remember the discussion online about not serving food to guests haha! I thought that is so different from my latin culture of feeding everyone all the time. Ecuadorians say I love you with food 🥰

  • @HELAURRR
    @HELAURRR 10 днів тому +2

    I’m Korean-Australian but I have lived in Norway all off my life so I can also speak Norwegian fluently and I didn’t understand what the Norwegian girl said she sounded more danish than Norwegian tbh.

  • @natzzef
    @natzzef 19 днів тому +3

    This was so much fun! Please visit Scandinavia soon. I’d like to hear Wooseok & Pentagon live in Stockholm or Trondheim🇸🇪🇳🇴

  • @Enchisedmy
    @Enchisedmy 20 днів тому +8

    I would suggest getting an actual norwegian for this. Aside from genetics what makes a norwegian is the culture of which she seems to know very little based on how virtually nothing was said about it and how she didn't get the Russ colors right, as well as the norwegian language which is drowned out by her heavy asian accent.
    Regarding the artifacts you might find she is simply wrong. You may not keep what you find to yourself.
    Norway and Iceland are absolutely not the same. Iceland is not even in Scandinavia.
    I'm not suggesting you need an expert, but if I can spot these flaws most probably can. To some extent it goes for the Swede as well; You cannot ride a bike to Denmark. The bridge connecting Sweden to Denmark does not allow bikes.

    • @bloodyfitnerd1947
      @bloodyfitnerd1947 20 днів тому

      Leave your racism at the door, her accent was a trondheim accent (trønder). Yes she got things wrong with the russ, and iceland and norway isn't the same.
      Also you're wrong about the not being able to ride a bike to denmark from sweden, as she said it would take a very long time, because you'd have to go through Norway then take the boat to Denmark, or Finland, Russia Estonia latvia lithuania poland germany and then denmark (obv would not want to get into russia now because of the war and stuff, but the point is, it's not impossible to ride a bike from sweden to denmark, it would just take a very long time )
      and yes she got the artifact thing wrong but a lot of norwegians don't know that, which is why a lot of people get fined when the goverement find out that they found something and didn't report it.

    • @Enchisedmy
      @Enchisedmy 20 днів тому +4

      @@bloodyfitnerd1947 Racism? Wanna elaborate on that? Pretty big word to throw around with absolutely zero reasoning.
      If you truly want to nitpick about the ability to bike to norway it is technically possible but given the context of them talking about how far south she lives as they're asking if she can bike to denmark I thought they meant the only relevant connection nearby. I still think that's what they meant.
      Others getting things wrong just makes them less suited for this kind of chat. Just like it does with her. So the "other norwegians get it wrong too" doesn't carry any weight. Obviously I'm not suggesting you replace her with somebody else who doesn't know XYZ. I'm suggesting you replace her with somebody who does.
      Edit: Another note on the bike thing would be, since you mentioned using public transport to "cheat" you could do the same directly from Malmö in Sweden via train across the same bridge you can't bike over.

    • @bloodyfitnerd1947
      @bloodyfitnerd1947 20 днів тому +1

      @@Enchisedmy "get an actual norwegian" With a sentence like that, anyone would think you're saying she's not norwegian based on her looks being typically asian.
      They got an actual Norwegian, just because she doesn't have white hair and blue eyes doesn't mean she's not Norwegian.

    • @Enchisedmy
      @Enchisedmy 20 днів тому +5

      @@bloodyfitnerd1947 Right... So nationality and genetics are the same? If I, pale as a ghost, acquire a Ugandan citizenship, do you think they'd feel fairly represented by me?

    • @bloodyfitnerd1947
      @bloodyfitnerd1947 20 днів тому +6

      @@Enchisedmy Sure let's play your game, lets assume this white person you're talking about isn't born in Uganda (because there are white people in a lot of African countries who are born there and are 100% african)
      Lets say this is a white person in their 20s who want a Ugandan citizenship, so first of all that's a big difference from being born in Norway but possibly have asian parents, or maybe only one of her parents are asian and her mother or father is Norwegian, sure maybe she's even adopted, still she would be considered Norwegian, and not "an asian who got a citizenship"
      You're straight up saying now that she's not Norwegian because she looks Asian, so yeah, that's racist.

  • @callmecloudy6225
    @callmecloudy6225 10 днів тому +1

    3:03 As a Dane, I do love how Kino repeated “vejret” (the weather) as if he completely understood how much it sucks in Denmark🤣
    (Ida is talking about how the weather isn’t so good in the country)
    (Our weather is incredibly shifty, it’s either pouring down, scorching hot or insanely windy in the summer. You’ve gotta put on clothes suitable for every weather, everyday😂)

  • @zup3826
    @zup3826 20 днів тому +11

    The subtitles are so chaotic 😂

  • @johnnorthtribe
    @johnnorthtribe 20 днів тому +7

    The thing with "not serving food to kids friend" was taken a bit out of context. This person with immigrated parents who brought this up was talking about his youth. In like the 80s and maybe into the 90s (before the internet era and mobile era) it was common that you eat home with your family. It was just how our culture was. Dinner was a family thing. Also, in an dense populated area as I grew up in we were a lot of kids hanging out and sometime went home to someone to play Nintendo or whatever. Than the parents come home from work. Why would they expect there to be a bunch of kids to serve some extra food. Most likely the parents of each kids did not even know each other in such an area. Also most likely they did not buy food more than for them and their children. Remember, this was before mobile was introduced to the mass. Today if my kids have friends over, I ask them if they want to eat but they have to ask their parents first. That was not possible in the 80s and early 90s. No you went home to eat at dinner time (5-6 pm) then you went out again to play with your friends.

    • @visualdarkness
      @visualdarkness 19 днів тому

      My family was not like that when growing up, although none of my parents are Swedish, but I completely agree with it being taken out of context. It was all about not taking that sacred dinner time away from the other families, where they could bond with their children. Very few would have said now if they were asked to serve the friend some food, it was about respect.

    • @burgeryoufoundbehindthegrill
      @burgeryoufoundbehindthegrill 17 днів тому

      Ah that makes sense, thanks!

  • @Onnarashi
    @Onnarashi 20 днів тому +9

    Why do they put someone with a foreign background as the "Norwegian" every time?

    • @Asa...S
      @Asa...S 20 днів тому +2

      I think this is recorded in South Korea, perhaps there aren't that many Norwegian immigrants there who wish to be on the show I guess, she's probably Norwegian-Korean, with one parent from each culture.

    • @BirkAxarberi
      @BirkAxarberi 18 днів тому

      30-40% of the Norwegian population have a foreign background...

    • @MaidenViking_
      @MaidenViking_ 16 днів тому +1

      @@BirkAxarberi That is incorrect. The highest numbers I can find, is closer to 18-19%

    • @MaidenViking_
      @MaidenViking_ 15 днів тому

      @@BirkAxarberi Do some research, there is a loot of good sources out there that will actually give you the right numbers. It's up to you if you bother to look it up yourself. If you keep posting wrongfully numbers, I take it as you are just to lazy to look it up. Have a nice day.

    • @BirkAxarberi
      @BirkAxarberi 11 днів тому

      @@MaidenViking_ It's basic math. Birthrate has to be over 2.0 for population growth and the statistics shows that it has been below 2.0 since 1975. Which means the population will decline without immigrants.

  • @AndreaDoesYoga
    @AndreaDoesYoga 20 днів тому +1

    🌍 Super fascinating cultural exchange, love it! 🙌

  • @hooflovelm
    @hooflovelm 5 днів тому

    this was a fun video. and i love kino, wooseok and im norwegian to so extra fun :)

  • @nattm6553
    @nattm6553 19 днів тому +6

    As a Swede i must say its pretty easy to understand Norwegian and Danish if the dialect isn't to broad and thick.
    Understand the writing and text is even more easy

  • @l.h.3586
    @l.h.3586 20 днів тому +7

    The answer about where to go in Sweden should be the Ice Hotel.

  • @robertfrye5161
    @robertfrye5161 2 дні тому

    If I had seen this video a few years ago it would have surprised me. I traveled internationally for 20 years, most of the early years were europe, the later years Asia. I grew up were German style language was often heard, and I understood it, also as an infant i was around my German speaking grandmother and her family. I took one year of it in school. When I went to Germany it took a while but eventually I was understanding more and more each day, after 2 years, I could carry on a conversation, not with perfect grammer but understandable, that was around 1980. In about 2015 I saw a Tv channel that had mysteries on it, but in the original languages. The first one I picked were German cop shows with subtitles. For a few weeks I used the subtitles as it had been 30 plus years, but then it all came back to me. Then I saw a show in Dutch, got most of it right away, then a show in Flemish, got most of it. Then one in Danish, same thing. The one I had the hardest time adjusting to was a show in Swedish, but it was so well done I watched it intently, that show is called The Bridge, which has been remade/modified into an English/French version, great program. The French was easy, worked in an office from 1981 to 1991, French was spoken by 3 of the guys therr

  • @juniartirosdelina8118
    @juniartirosdelina8118 19 днів тому +2

    Wooseok really as him, cute and more handsome 😊

  • @magickindsomate6140
    @magickindsomate6140 20 днів тому +6

    Wooseok so cute 🥹🫶🏻🩵

  • @Hu20828
    @Hu20828 20 днів тому +4

    Yey Pentagon❤ thank you so much☺

  • @P-Mouse
    @P-Mouse 18 днів тому +1

    Denmark: commander and leader
    Sweden: joy and laughter
    Norway: toughest fighter

  • @livedandletdie
    @livedandletdie 20 днів тому +10

    Yeah people who don't speak regional dialects have it quite easy speaking to each other... Now get someone from Steinkjer in Norway, someone from Älvdalen, Sweden, and someone from Haderslev, Denmark. Oh boy, it would be as impossible for people to understand each other as it could possibly become, and this isn't the only such composition of Scandinavians I can think of.

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie 20 днів тому

      Okay the Norwegian girl is from Steinkjer but she spoke in Bokmål and not in Nynorsk...

    • @bloodyfitnerd1947
      @bloodyfitnerd1947 20 днів тому +3

      @@livedandletdie no one speaks bokmål, bokmål is a written language, and she spoke with the trondheim dialect /trønder.

    • @Mas-ij3ti
      @Mas-ij3ti 20 днів тому

      Well they got a Swedish person from a region that speaks a dialect closer to Danish than it is Swedish.

    • @visualdarkness
      @visualdarkness 19 днів тому

      @@Mas-ij3ti Skånska is not close to Danish at all. They both tend to underpronounciate but they shoot off in completely different directions otherwise.

    • @Mas-ij3ti
      @Mas-ij3ti 18 днів тому

      @@visualdarkness It is linguistically closer to Danish than it is Swedish when speaking. Hence why no one can understand them in Sweden. Norwegians speak better Swedish.

  • @paulruano1903
    @paulruano1903 20 днів тому +5

    Answer is: Yes, thry can undetstand each other, realtively easy.
    BUT some dialects tones and non-normal ch9ice of words can be VERY weird... and then its impossible to understand.
    This is very true for certain regions in Denmark... whom not even danish people understand those danish regions.

  • @user-lw8bv3ln9n
    @user-lw8bv3ln9n 20 днів тому +23

    I’m a Dane. The funny thing is that Germany, which borders Denmark, is just a neighboring country, but Norway and Sweden are not only neighboring countries, but more like brother countries. 😊

    • @AnnaBanana_00
      @AnnaBanana_00 19 днів тому +2

      Like Sweden and Norway are y'alls siblings and Germany your cousin LMAO

    • @unknowndane4754
      @unknowndane4754 19 днів тому +6

      It has a lot to do with the fact that Germany as an entity is fairly young, whereas our interactions with Norway and Sweden are much older.

    • @user-lw8bv3ln9n
      @user-lw8bv3ln9n 19 днів тому +2

      @@AnnaBanana_00 More like Germany is an acquaintance. 😜

    • @AnnaBanana_00
      @AnnaBanana_00 19 днів тому +1

      @@user-lw8bv3ln9n Oh yeah, wouldn’t wanna be related to Germany, I get it

    • @Lampchuanungang
      @Lampchuanungang 19 днів тому +1

      This topic is just bullshit, the Low Saxon German language influenced and modernized the Nordic languages, it was the driving factor in their emancipation from Old Norse.
      Proto Norse was born in northern Germany and moved further north to the Scandinavian and Nordic countries.
      Germany is a Germanic nation and has always been sister to the Nordic countries.
      This whole topic is just rubbish, nonsense and stupidity, just shit, they don't know their own culture and they still discriminate against other brotherly Germanic countries, just shit-talking and shit-eating bastards here.

  • @saandvi
    @saandvi 19 днів тому +4

    I feel like the Norwegian representative might be someone who lived in Norway for a couple years at some point in her life, she sounds like a tourist just guessing things about Norway.. a grown norwegian would also be able to understand swedish way better, moreover, her english level is worse than probably 95% of norwegians.. i assume that this is just poor casting

  • @Rm00o
    @Rm00o 20 днів тому +8

    I Love pentagon ❤

  • @eriknystrom5839
    @eriknystrom5839 19 днів тому +1

    I’m from Sweden. Normally it’s easier to understand Norwegian than Danish but in this case you are right, the girl from Norway was a little difficult to understand.

  • @mimsredjelly
    @mimsredjelly 20 днів тому +3

    Kino in linguist mode ❤

  • @OSRS_Emperor
    @OSRS_Emperor 18 днів тому +2

    I am Danish and no way they said Danish is easiest to pronounce

  • @elinmor89
    @elinmor89 11 днів тому +1

    I'm norwegian. I understand swedish, since I heard swedish people talking both on tv and in real life since I was a kid and can understand some danish. But for me danish is easier to read than have a conversation with someone in danish😅

  • @binni-bunny
    @binni-bunny 17 днів тому

    omg I knew they were familiar but it just clicked at 8:15 Age of Youth is my FAVOURITE kdrama 🥺 I've watched it so many times and never knew it was Pentagon! huge props

  • @nellan1799
    @nellan1799 20 днів тому +10

    norway and iceland aint the same lol did the norweigan just said that

    • @paulruano1903
      @paulruano1903 20 днів тому +1

      2 different languages yes.
      BUT norway did colonize the Iceland.
      And the iceland people is almost all of norwegian decent.
      And Iceland language is very much intact the old Norrøn-lamguage.
      Norrøn-language is the original viking-lamguage that came from Norway.

    • @visualdarkness
      @visualdarkness 19 днів тому +2

      @@paulruano1903 If Noway and Iceland are the same due to heritage, then basically the whole Nordics are one country considering history. Makes no sense.

    • @paulruano1903
      @paulruano1903 19 днів тому +1

      @@visualdarkness no idea what makes no sense to you.
      But as stated... Icelandic people is decended from the norwegian vikings.
      And even more: due to how isolated Iceland is, the Icelandic DNA today is very much similar to the original Norwegian vikings from almost 1000 years ago. (Icelandic people has not mixed with so many different people through history after the Norwegian vikings established colony in Iceland).
      Ok, was not that hard to understand?.
      Now next, about the rest if the nordic countries?.
      Yes, they are very much the same people also!. With exception of the finish people.
      So lets concentrate about the 3 scandinavian countrues: Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.
      Thry have been part of each other "empire/,kingdoms" through the last 1000 years+.
      Duting the black plague in Europe, the norwegian kingdom got so devestated because almost all the educated people died due to the black plague.
      So norway went back to the "dark ages". A total collapse of civilization.
      So norway in a last effort to not completly end up into savagery and anarchy and whats worse... contacted Denmark to ask to voluntarly become a part of Denmark.
      Denmark then sent one of its sons to become the new king of Norway. And in addition danish upperclass (the educated populatio) mass-integrated into Norway to take over all the idle positions of jobs that required education etc.
      Norway became defacto part of Denmark.
      Much later Denmark-Norway allied itself with Napoleon.
      Napoleon lost the war... Denmark as an ally had to pay retribution to Sweden (whom was on the other side).
      Sweden then got Norway as part of the retribution package.
      But before Sweden could gets its soldiers back home from the european continent... the norwegians quickly assembked a meeting and rebelled.
      The norwegians would have militarywise been absolutely no match against the swedes at that time.
      But when the swedes came home, they surprised the norwegians with a deal.
      Norway would get its partly independence again, but under swedish lojalty/control.
      So from 1814 norway got its modern constitution... but was ruled by swedish king until aprox 1906 or something.
      Then norway got its own king (from denmark). And full independence.
      But thst is just the latest interconnections between the scandinavian countrues.
      There has been maany various formations between the 3 countrues all back to viking age. Invluding norway and sweden being part of an emoire.
      And it all resulted in a lot of trade between eachother, close relationships, same language (only minir deviations as would find in dialects).
      And if you go all the way back to viking ages... it was those 3 scandinavian countrues that was behind the vikings in Europe:)
      Allthough at thst time it was still many smaller viking lords (not united into countries).
      And as a BONUS, ever wondered why Russians (slavs) look so similar in many ways to the scandinavians? (More higher levels of blond hair, blue eyes, etc)?.
      The 2st Russian empire was formed in what is today Kiev ukraine.
      But at that time it was called the "Kiev Rus" empire. The 1st russian empire.
      It is about 1000 years ago.
      But right before that happend... Kiev was a small rivercity.
      And the swedish vikings had traveled (mostly for trade and raids) down through the lakes from north europe all the way down to the black sea.
      1 of those rivercitues they parked in for trade and youknowwhat was Kiev.
      So the vikings very much breeded through the original kiev etc area.
      At that time the place was a mix of turkish, viking heritage, and russian tribes, etc. (Or what we today consider heritage from todays vikings, russians, etc).
      Not long after a "russian" prince (tribe from one of the region which is today russian) conquered kiev and created the 2st Russian empire called "Kiev Rus".
      Population at those times in history is nowhere near todays population.
      So example viking interbreeding with the population had much more impact then, compared to what wpuld have been the instance with how big a population is now.
      It was a very small rivercity. Not a multimillion city. Etc.
      Many think Russians are only 1 ethnicity, but that is wrong. Russians has many ethnicities.
      But when people mention "the russian ethnicity" they are usually refering to the slavs ethnicity.
      Which ironicly has mix of viking ethnicity also.
      So history has many interesting accidengly roadpaths.
      And since populationlevels was much smaller at those times... it had great impact in changes.
      Finish population however is a very different story than the scandinavians. It has its own unique story. With eventually some interactions with the scandinavians. But they are pretty much their own ethnicity with their own unique language which has no resemblance to the scandinavian language(s).
      (Things are retold from memory, so may be some smaller deviations).
      Bonus2:
      Danish vikings interacted into the english/uk, and made a footprint there.
      It is not ssme size footprint due to wngland had higher population. But it still had a big enough footprint, including royalty genes if i remember correctly.

    • @visualdarkness
      @visualdarkness 19 днів тому

      @@paulruano1903 What you are talking about is genetics, but that still doesn't mean that the countries are the same. Which is what was being discussed here.

    • @paulruano1903
      @paulruano1903 19 днів тому

      @visualdarkness its genetic, its historic, its cultural.
      They are 99,91 % the same.
      As i said... they have a very long history of intermarriages, ttades, intercommunications, etc, etc.
      Even long before the EU Schengen, the Scandinavian countries had an open movement and trade union. All rights included (free hospitals/medical, movement, trade rights, etc).
      Those same rights applies today. Even when Norway is not member of EU.
      When you are so intertwinned boyh genetic, common history, and culture becomes pretty much the same.
      They are currently 3 countries.
      But thry are the same.
      Only real difference is:
      Norway:
      5mill people
      Richer (due to oil, gass, fish, timber, and watereneegy).
      Denmark:
      6-7 million or so...(?)
      Semi-rich, but not as rich as Norway. But still rich.
      And the most racist/xenophobic of the 3 countries.
      Language is more "braut/harder" tone. It almost spunds like they are about to puke tbh;).
      Sweden:
      11 million (aprox)
      Semi-rich, but the poorest of those 3 countries. But a more healthy buisness system (not so reliant on natural resources).
      The most emphatic and warm of those 3 countries.
      Language, it has the softest tones of the 3 scandinavians.
      The 3 countries are the same.
      The language is basicly the same.
      Internally dialects have more deviations compared to the 3 languages in itself.
      Example denmark has some dislects that most danish people do not understand;)
      So the "slogan" that the 3 countrues is the same... is very fitting and correct.
      It is like 3 siblings.
      They are the same... but off course not 100% identical.
      But they are so the same/identical that they could easily step in and pretend they represented each other.

  • @triumphofmagic
    @triumphofmagic 20 днів тому +4

    It's my tagonies AAAA

  • @floro7687
    @floro7687 19 днів тому +1

    All you need to know: In Denmark it is: Stegt flæsk og persillesovs. In Sweden: Stekt fläsk och lögsås. In Norway: Flesk og duppe.

  • @ceciliekirketerp4275
    @ceciliekirketerp4275 20 днів тому +2

    I love how Interested Wooseok & Kino was - my nordic Universe heart melt 🥹🫶🏻
    But first of all, why do people say danish milk taste so good?? 😭 Someone tell me, I can't figure out. Maybe it's because I've drink it all my life.
    Second, Wooseok I don't think you want to try to get covered in cinnamon & peber 😅🥲 but if you want, then okay.
    Third thing, it's sounds a good plan you first go to Norway maybe even Iceland first, then Sweden and then Denmark.
    Fourth thing, the controvers Sweden had with dinner. We kinda have the same controvers in Denmark too. It's actually kinda hard, to explain how it is. Because it really depends on where in country you live in and depends from family to family.

    • @sarisen95
      @sarisen95 19 днів тому

      For the Danish milk thing I think they said it because in Korea they have a brand called "Denmark" that mainly sells milk and yogurt in all sorts of flavors 😅

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier 20 днів тому +3

    Blue for nurse?
    I seem to recall that accounting was blue.
    Red is people preparing for university.
    Green is agriculture related stuff.
    Black I seem to recall is studying for something you can work at right away after studying there, so mechanics etc...

    • @BirkAxarberi
      @BirkAxarberi 18 днів тому

      Economy was blue and it was removed in 2006. Red is for preparing for uni. Green and Black are just wannabes.

  • @itsda3unyoutube
    @itsda3unyoutube 20 днів тому +4

    Whooaa i think i haven't heard a lot about countries of cast in this vid🫢 good to know about new culture and ppl around the world!!! glad i'm universe

  • @choha13
    @choha13 20 днів тому +1

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @JUGGALOBBG
    @JUGGALOBBG 17 днів тому +2

    Im norwegian and i didnt understand a word the norwegian girl said

  • @2015id
    @2015id 20 днів тому +2

    I LOVE THEM

  • @euzabittencourt2134
    @euzabittencourt2134 20 днів тому +1

    Vocês são lindos e carismático.

  • @kekekeke2200
    @kekekeke2200 9 днів тому

    As a swede i can confirm i wear my hair in braids often, have a beer belly and wear fur coats most of the year

  • @ispbrotherwolf
    @ispbrotherwolf 20 днів тому +1

    We are dysfluently siblings, we love one another.

  • @annam1966
    @annam1966 20 днів тому +3

    As an Icelander Í understand as well❤

    • @StoltHD
      @StoltHD 19 днів тому

      yeh, well... most of you also speak perfect "school" Danish or Norwegian, so...
      But I can promise you that as a Norwegian it is not easy to understand Icelandic, even for Norwegians with few years on their back... 🤣

  • @znail4675
    @znail4675 19 днів тому

    The Swedish Food controversy mentioned was about feeding others children as it's traditionally is not done unless agreed on. This have more to do with the parents being upset if the children already eaten and can't participate in the family dinner or that the food is something the parents don't want their children to eat. It's not like there is any lack of food in Sweden making children need feeding by strangers.
    This led to the controversial situation with a foreign child sitting in the room of the friend while the friend and family were eating. But this is more of a communication problem and is something that never ever happened to me. Most parents will assume the child will leave by themself to get home in time for their own dinner. If it's known that they are staying over dinner so would it be natural to ask the child to check with it's parents if it's OK for them to eat there.

  • @jimmywayne983
    @jimmywayne983 15 днів тому +2

    Im danish, yet i know the Norwegian girl you picked, have absolutely no clue what she is talking about 🤷 it shouldnt be very hard to find someone who knows more about the country they actually claim to be from.

  • @gemmamoon5998
    @gemmamoon5998 20 днів тому +1

    I did not expect them to reference Asgard in 2024 😭

  • @TomWaldgeist
    @TomWaldgeist 20 днів тому +5

    Jeg har ikke forstått hva nordmannen sa.

  • @MadsCR
    @MadsCR 17 днів тому +4

    Well if you are going to get a norwegian girl.. maybe you should get a NORWEGIAN girl...

  • @rikkelarsen9761
    @rikkelarsen9761 20 днів тому +1

    Uhh Hey Ida nice to keep seeing you everywhere 😂

    • @IdaMariaBaek
      @IdaMariaBaek 20 днів тому +1

      Nice for you to watch ❤️

  • @johnnyrosenberg9522
    @johnnyrosenberg9522 19 днів тому +1

    Funny to hear that Norwegians, not only Swedes, mix up the letters v and w in English. I heard ”Wikings” and ”eweryvhere” in the same sentence. 😁👍

  • @itsda3unyoutube
    @itsda3unyoutube 20 днів тому +5

    7:37 BEST QUOTE OF THIS CENTURY🤌🤌🤌정우석 짱웃김

  • @Tanaka20
    @Tanaka20 18 днів тому

    It's really a generational thing as well in terms of the Scandinavian people understanding the languages.
    I am Danish, and my parents understand Swedish and Norweigian well, where I for example, I can understand it like, 50/50. Those people from the 21st century I've met, could only really understand the very few words that our languages have in common.
    That said. Come come to Scandinavia! We'll gladly have you. ^^

  • @acrojen03
    @acrojen03 12 днів тому

    Tbf, Russefeiring is something you can choose to participate in, and it is during your last semester of high school. So everyone who celebrates should be at least 18, some will be 19 already depending on when they're born.

  • @Yellow_water78
    @Yellow_water78 10 днів тому

    i think understanding the norweigan might be harder for some people because they live further away from norway, i live in värmland and like 20-30 minutes from ørje and it might be because a lot of my friends are norweigan so im used to it but i understood her easily

  • @AlexTheFruitcake
    @AlexTheFruitcake 17 днів тому

    The reason all the nordic languages sound similar and are very similar is that we didnt become 3 different countries before the 18th century. Before that we where all 1 people. But when you have several men who want to be king (we learned about having kings from the british when the vikings went there) you need more than one kingdom. Hence, the nordics got seperated.

  • @dianakrueziu
    @dianakrueziu 18 днів тому +1

    OMG IM SO HAPPY SWEDEN IS MENTIONED

    • @grandmakida6591
      @grandmakida6591 18 днів тому +1

      ME TOO / Magda from the video

    • @dianakrueziu
      @dianakrueziu 18 днів тому +1

      @@grandmakida6591 dog när du tog upp just Sweden gate för dom, är ett fantastiskt av de så är bara glad att de fick veta mer av Sverige🇸🇪

    • @grandmakida6591
      @grandmakida6591 17 днів тому +1

      @@dianakrueziu jag tog inte upp det, de tvingade mig att prata om det fastän jag sa emot tusen gånger, lita aldrig på vad du ser i videor

  • @planejanedaniels
    @planejanedaniels 20 днів тому

    🌍Cool cross-cultural vid, guys! 🎉

  • @phj223
    @phj223 19 днів тому +1

    This is coming from a Swede: Norwegians and Danes of whatever dialect seem to understand Swedish with no problem.
    I can generally understand the "main" dialect of Norwegian (like the one they would speak in the capital Olso for the most part), but there's another northern Norwegian dialect that has many completely different words and expressions, and while I might recognize some of them due to this or that Norwegian series or film I've watched, it is a bit tricky. Still, we'd get through to eachother.
    Danish, on the other hand, is a completely different beast. Written Danish is no problem, but the phonetics of the spoken language is just insane. I say this with no intended disrespect, but basically it sounds like early 80s Arnold Schwarzenegger is trying to speak, while getting tasered AND having a stroke. o.O

    • @pallew
      @pallew 19 днів тому +1

      As a Dane, Norwegian is much easier to both understand and read. Some Swedish dialects are easier. And don't flatter your self, Swedish sounds like a little 8 yr old boy singing

  • @revivedsoul1099
    @revivedsoul1099 16 днів тому

    Bro with white shirt, got good english, he going to travel and be mr international lol

  • @Savignylol
    @Savignylol 17 днів тому +1

    Tenke at Natti skal melde natti-natt til de videoan her, for æ har aldri sett nån kuke det mer til når man skal kjøre en vanilla "ka e Norge"-variant... Djeeeez!

  • @vventracy
    @vventracy 6 днів тому

    I am Swedish and the Swedish girl gives right information

  • @Lampchuanungang
    @Lampchuanungang 20 днів тому +2

    😅😅😅😅😅😅
    By the way, Koreans should learn Hungarian and Finnish and Estonian are easy, soft Asian languages and sound close to Korean.
    Koreans mix Swedish, Danish and Norwegian with English, it's so bad you'll never learn it, I understand them, these languages sound like a more difficult, as more regional English for theirs minds.
    Their mentality is that about Nordic languages, and that way they won't learn it 😂😂😂😂😂💗💗💗💗💗😉
    The girls are fun, polite and playful, I love them all.
    Pentagonboys are good souls, love to them 💋💕👍🇰🇷

  • @annikenenge2142
    @annikenenge2142 20 днів тому +1

    Russefeiring and the colors mean different things. Nurses and doctors also go under the black because it is for the vocational subjects, while blue is just a normal school way where you focuse more on the subjects like "smart people" and the red is just nornal

    • @BirkAxarberi
      @BirkAxarberi 18 днів тому

      Blue was economy and it was ceased in 2006.

  • @Henry-bh2hs
    @Henry-bh2hs 20 днів тому +3

    Do yall have a problem with ethnic norwegians good lord

  • @Icada_tv
    @Icada_tv 16 днів тому +3

    No hate to the Norwegian girl but im Norwegian and she does not seem to know anything about Norway and our culture

  • @ludvigekekrantz1357
    @ludvigekekrantz1357 18 днів тому

    Am awedis ande it vas hardu tu under stende😮

  • @SebHaarfagre
    @SebHaarfagre 19 днів тому

    7:33 That sub 😂
    He's saying "I like Norway", not "we like Nordic".
    Also, he says it in Swedish :P

  • @kpe02
    @kpe02 18 днів тому

    Aaa they should have talked more about our sibling rivalry that we have with each other. Like we can say whatever we want about the other country because we really have a hate/love relationship

  • @user-sp9ty2nq7g
    @user-sp9ty2nq7g 19 днів тому

    Kino~~❤❤❤❤❤

  • @nellan1799
    @nellan1799 20 днів тому

    seeing this when i graudate at friday an some people went off yeh whatever its called in english an got hurt, an i saw jow they doo it in norway mtoo im like that would be nice too