Love watching these videos. Been trying to learn Norsk and my memory isnt as sharp as it used to be so watching these videos over and over helps with remembering certain words and phrases. Not to mention Anette is so beautiful its hard not to listen to every word she says and stay focused 😅. The language is also beautiful. Really wish I could get my hands on a book version of this or maybe like practice starter tests with drills and exercises to help with using words and forming sentaces and phrases. I would really love to live in Norway because everything sounds perfect to me. Hiking, camping, fresh air, and peace.
It is very interesting, I like languages, and I am interested in travel, I have been studying Norwegian, Swedish, Dutch and German. You explain very well. This video liked me.
For people complaining that Annette speaks too fast, you can go to settings and slow down the video. It's also useful for videos when people talk too slowly! 👍
As someone that speaks Dutch natively, I actually get why you would think Dutch is a scandinavian language. It is way more similar to those languages than it is to German or English, for some reason, especially regarding vocabulary. They're alle still Germanic languages in the end though
good lesson but some words/ endings are very difficult because in the spoken word you dont hear any different if spoken (example: the window: vinduet and vinduer) How could I ever be able to learn that barely spoken endings? :(
I have to stop and repeat each part - to make a lesson of each. Later on, there's a lot of extra vocabulary, and it would be good to have a dozen examples as a 'drill'. I think the part about 'her' and 'hit', 'der' and 'dit' is called 'case' inflections or maybe the 'dative case', as German has when English uses 'to' for direction. I don't know yet if Norwegian has the same as German for all four cases. For English and German speakers, Scandinavian is unusual as it has 'the' added to the end of words. Living in Australia, it does make sense to us that we live in a country - not an island. [Australia is too large to be though of as an island. Tasmania is a state that is also an island, though.] Perhaps Icelanders think of Iceland as being an island?
We do not have a gerunium form. Though the context usually makes it clear, one may add words to stress whether the thing we do(verb) is on a regular basis og right now. For example: "Jeg står på ski" can mean "I am skiing" and "I ski". To make sure there is no misunderstanding one may say for instance "Jeg pleier stå på ski" or "Jeg står på ski nå", meaning "I usually ski" and "I am skiing now".
My grandmother came to America from southern Norway around 1900. I t always sounded to me that pronounced nei as nay. I had an uncle Einar whose name was pronounced as Anar. Any explainations?
hi mam ! your voice is seems to be very clear i understood 90% and i hope i want to learn norwegian language as i known english 80% more than as i say so how much charge for this service please let me know thanks a lot !
It’s funny as a Geordie we pronounce certain things the same, like house we pronounce hus. I wonder if that could be Scandinavian influence or just weird coincidence.
Your teaching is so clear and helpful! Explained my many questions. Although I've heard "en" is used for both feminine and masculine nowadays... So does that mean I'd be fine to say "en dør"?
I hear in Norway you get upset when people speak other languages here in America there seems to be some kind of language going on where if you think it you are committing a crime isn't that wrong just because you thought something there's called premeditation there is thinking so something's going on out here Norway
I also noticed a lot of people are looking directly in the people's eyes and like your eyes moved your eyes moved that's also another language that the American should not speaking and I'm American
Dear Ms. Anette, Kindly translate: I'm from Jordan & I'm Jordanian. I try to translate both : Jeg er fra Jordan og Jeg er Jordani. plz. correct. Tusen takk. 😎
Hvorfor siger man ikke.."Taler du norsk?" "å tale" means "to speak" and "å snakke" means "to talk"??????? Jeg kan godt lide norske språk, det er like som dansk....Kan man også siger "Det føles underligt å være hjemme igjen"? Can you explain me the difference between "laver" and "gjør"? til exempel " "Vi laver mat" og " Hvordan gjør man det" Can you pronounce "Rødgrød med fløde på" correctly by using the soft "D". This is a danish tongue-twister, that many norwegians have problems to pronounce correctly....Can you count to 100 by using the danish numbersystem...???? Yes "Bokmål" and "Nydansk" have so much in common, that both languages can be just dialects to eachother rather than different languages....but there are differences...People often say that danish is trying to talk norwegian with a potato in the mouth...but thats just a stereotype...Danske snakker "Stød" og har "soft D". Nordmand har "Pitch accent" likesom svenske...
'nynorsk' is pretty politicised and most people do not like to be forced, probably a little bit like how people was treated in the Soviet Union I guess
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Your breakdown of the different words for 'think' genuinely saved me from so much pain and confusion.
Thank you!
Get your FREE account here: goo.gl/MMSmxU
WOW! YOU ARE SO SMART.
YOU EXPLAIN SUPER WELL.
Love watching these videos. Been trying to learn Norsk and my memory isnt as sharp as it used to be so watching these videos over and over helps with remembering certain words and phrases. Not to mention Anette is so beautiful its hard not to listen to every word she says and stay focused 😅. The language is also beautiful. Really wish I could get my hands on a book version of this or maybe like practice starter tests with drills and exercises to help with using words and forming sentaces and phrases. I would really love to live in Norway because everything sounds perfect to me. Hiking, camping, fresh air, and peace.
I understood very well, You are a good teacher, the video liked me a lot
It is very interesting, I like languages, and I am interested in travel, I have been studying Norwegian, Swedish, Dutch and German. You explain very well. This video liked me.
For people complaining that Annette speaks too fast, you can go to settings and slow down the video. It's also useful for videos when people talk too slowly! 👍
Yes, I'm playing it on 0.5x
Great lessons of norsk,so clear explained,thanks a lot
Tusen takk!! ❤❤
Thank you 😊
I like the Norwegian. Sounds like Scottish English built on a German basis 😂
I FEEL ATTRACTED FOR THOSE NORDIC / SCANDINAVIAN LANGUAGES.
FINNISH DANISH NORWEGIAN SWEDISH AND DUTCH.
Juan Baez dutch isn't scandinavian
Nemo. YOU ARE RIGHT.
Dutch isn't Noridc. However Icelandic, is a part of the Nordic Region.
As someone that speaks Dutch natively, I actually get why you would think Dutch is a scandinavian language. It is way more similar to those languages than it is to German or English, for some reason, especially regarding vocabulary. They're alle still Germanic languages in the end though
@@nemo1210 nor finnish..
Thank you very much for your very good in inglish..im from the philipines and now married with norwegian..i learn more norsk ord this site.
Same here
Super Annette.....Mange takk!
Thank You, Anette! :-D You are wonderful.
Tusen takk for klassene!
Many Thanks
Thank you very much for your video it's really helpful. GOD bless you
i love this lesson
Wow😍 you teach very well ❤🌹😘
thank you so much
What dialects are used in Innlandet (Valdres area) and Telemark (Sauland & Hjartdal) areas?
To people around the world, Annette is the face of Norway!
good lesson but some words/ endings are very difficult because in the spoken word you dont hear any different if spoken (example: the window: vinduet and vinduer)
How could I ever be able to learn that barely spoken endings? :(
Wow thank you so much
More lessons to know the language of Norwegian ❤️❤️❤️
What a cute teacher.
very well done
I have to stop and repeat each part - to make a lesson of each. Later on, there's a lot of extra vocabulary, and it would be good to have a dozen examples as a 'drill'.
I think the part about 'her' and 'hit', 'der' and 'dit' is called 'case' inflections or maybe the 'dative case', as German has when English uses 'to' for direction. I don't know yet if Norwegian has the same as German for all four cases.
For English and German speakers, Scandinavian is unusual as it has 'the' added to the end of words.
Living in Australia, it does make sense to us that we live in a country - not an island. [Australia is too large to be though of as an island. Tasmania is a state that is also an island, though.] Perhaps Icelanders think of Iceland as being an island?
you could make a video about the gerunder in norwegian
We do not have a gerunium form. Though the context usually makes it clear, one may add words to stress whether the thing we do(verb) is on a regular basis og right now. For example: "Jeg står på ski" can mean "I am skiing" and "I ski". To make sure there is no misunderstanding one may say for instance "Jeg pleier stå på ski" or "Jeg står på ski nå", meaning "I usually ski" and "I am skiing now".
My grandmother came to America from southern Norway around 1900. I t always sounded to me that pronounced nei as nay. I had an uncle Einar whose name was pronounced as Anar. Any explainations?
hi mam ! your voice is seems to be very clear i understood 90% and i hope i want to learn norwegian language as i known english 80% more than as i say so how much charge for this service please let me know thanks a lot !
I speak bokmål but understand nynorsk too 😊
It’s funny as a Geordie we pronounce certain things the same, like house we pronounce hus. I wonder if that could be Scandinavian influence or just weird coincidence.
ikke before the modal and the infninitive why? you said after the first verb
Your teaching is so clear and helpful! Explained my many questions. Although I've heard "en" is used for both feminine and masculine nowadays... So does that mean I'd be fine to say "en dør"?
Yes
I speak Norwegian fluently, so I don't really know why I'm here...
Because it’s interesting! :)
Hahaha so you can teach us!
why is it not 'en dør'? I wasnt taught ei dør and its not in google translate either
Both are correct
takk
I hear in Norway you get upset when people speak other languages here in America there seems to be some kind of language going on where if you think it you are committing a crime isn't that wrong just because you thought something there's called premeditation there is thinking so something's going on out here Norway
I understand evrything
gud velsigne din sjel Amen
የቀንየለይ & Thanks
I also noticed a lot of people are looking directly in the people's eyes and like your eyes moved your eyes moved that's also another language that the American should not speaking and I'm American
Dear Ms. Anette,
Kindly translate: I'm from Jordan & I'm Jordanian.
I try to translate both :
Jeg er fra Jordan og Jeg er Jordani. plz. correct.
Tusen takk. 😎
Hvorfor siger man ikke.."Taler du norsk?" "å tale" means "to speak" and "å snakke" means "to talk"??????? Jeg kan godt lide norske språk, det er like som dansk....Kan man også siger "Det føles underligt å være hjemme igjen"? Can you explain me the difference between "laver" and "gjør"? til exempel " "Vi laver mat" og " Hvordan gjør man det" Can you pronounce "Rødgrød med fløde på" correctly by using the soft "D". This is a danish tongue-twister, that many norwegians have problems to pronounce correctly....Can you count to 100 by using the danish numbersystem...???? Yes "Bokmål" and "Nydansk" have so much in common, that both languages can be just dialects to eachother rather than different languages....but there are differences...People often say that danish is trying to talk norwegian with a potato in the mouth...but thats just a stereotype...Danske snakker "Stød" og har "soft D". Nordmand har "Pitch accent" likesom svenske...
😍😍😍
A question for Annette: if someone offers a cup of coffee. How do I ask and respond appropriately? Only half a cup.
Flink!!
You seem upset about Nynorsk’s low popularity? How nice of you.
'nynorsk' is pretty politicised and most people do not like to be forced, probably a little bit like how people was treated in the Soviet Union I guess
You are not say reciprocal correctly. Say it (re-sipprow-cal), not (re-sip-rowcal). Thank you for the Norwegian lessons.
Thank you.. but you speak too fast😊
Please help!!!! Put a little love in your heart and the lyrics of … Sørsia Gerilja Blør for sør norwegian rap
Kindly speak not to fast. .takk
this is actually really slow, compared to how we usually speak.
🏓🏓🏓🏓🏓🏓🏓🏓😘😘😘😘
you read Norway so fast please slow read
Jeg er fra Norge så jeg trenger ikke å lære Norsk
What a beautiful girl!
Why does she sound like she’s being held hostage at gun point?
LMAOOO LEAVE HER ALONE 😭😭😭💀💀💀
the problem is your so fast to speak..can you a bit speak slowly so we can understad more,thanks
DU GLØMT TRØNDERSK :/
nice girl
LOL i am norweagian
You don't look like a Norwegian.
Omg, how do you think Norwegians look like?
@@olkafasolka69 Certainly not like Asians or Northern Africans (not like her).
@@wrongthinker4475 I mean Norwegian people can look like anything so I don’t get your point lol
You don’t teach core words!
🇧🇷🇳🇴