@@casparlatete9935 Thanks for answering! We have a lot of work to do it seems, hehe. At least I can say that we do have one about cardinal numbers :D The V2 rules is coming soon. But since you are mentioning it, I guess you already know it
All the videos about Swedish vowel sounds were very helpful, with clear explanations and examples. And lots of fun at the same time, of course! 😄 Thanks a lot!
Hey, the 5 second clip where you said rösta and rosta was a helpful part, the back to back repeating of it in roughly 5 seconds is good because you can just hit the left arrow key and say it along like a loop.
If you want to learn more Swedish with us you can join our Swedish courses. Live-Zoom courses: elansutbildning.com/courses/ Online video courses: funswedish.teachable.com/courses/
I really like your channel! 😍 Keep making videos! Also, could you make a video about the pronounciation of the swedish 'h' sound as I find it pretty difficult to pronounce.
And, appart from being long or short, the letter ö actually represents two sounds in Swedish. It can be open (as in öra, smör) or closed (as in öga, födelse). Just like with the ä/e-sounds, it depend on whether the vowel is followed by an R or not (hence the difference between the open lära, ära and the closed träd, läsa, for instance).
em português esse sinal é chamado "trema" ¨, mas deixou de ser usado na nova revisão gramatical. Antes usávamos sobre o "u" "ü" , somente. Agora não é mais utilizado na nossa língua.
It can be somewhat frustrating when people ask me to spell my son's name and they look at me like im an insane person when I get to the letter "ö" because it doesn't exist in english. Then they get even more confused when they learn it's not the letter "O" , nor is it pronounced like an "O". Then I get the people who think they know what "ö" is because they've seen german umlauts of something and don't realize it's not an O with an umlaut on top. I hope some day the swedish alphabet becomes common knowledge, because its really not that many extra letters to learn, but at the same time I do understand why it's not there yet. I guess I'm just frustrated that people dont try harder to get peoples names right. I'm lucky if my kids name is pronounced with the proper number of syllables, let alone proper pronunciation lol.
@@weaselqueen220 …..I would imagine it is because sv does not occur in the English language much if at all….I can’t really think of another word. The original poster has a more difficult situation 😂
@@FunSwedish seems logical. I also do have another question. First time i heard Swedish language was Herr Mannelig song by Garmarna. And i'm still wondering: do people really sound like this in sweden? And where i can find more of musical, lyrical swedish compositions? I listened to Faun ad Skald, but its not what I'm looking for. Thank you in advance =)
Keinesfalls! Ö in German sounds completely different. You got to purse your lips to the max to get the real and long Ö sound. It sounds much softer than in Swedish.. at least in most cases! Österreich. Öl. Hören.
A long time ago ”Hor” was when people not married to each other had a sexual relation. ”Enkelt hor” was when only one of the persons involved was married. ”Dubbelt hor” was when both persons were married to someone else. If both persons were unmarried it was called ”skörlevnad”.
This is really a bad presentation of the Swedish vowel "Ö" - the teacher makes it sound similar to something you'd most likely hear from a cow. I cannot understand the point of explaining the pronounciation in that way - furthermore, she is actually pronouncing it in a way most common in the Southern parts of the country - back in the throat instead of pouting your lips (almost similar to when you intend to whistle).
This one is the final video of our Vowel pronunciation series.
What should we do next?
How about the sju sound?
Perhaps we could learn some of the most frequent contractions in spoken Swedish.
@@casparlatete9935 Thanks for answering!
We have a lot of work to do it seems, hehe.
At least I can say that we do have one about cardinal numbers :D
The V2 rules is coming soon. But since you are mentioning it, I guess you already know it
@@fabulousfam That sounds like a great idea!
If you could do grammar (starting with beginner to advanced), that would be awesome. I love the way you teach! 🌸💖
The thumbnail is 10/10. This will be in my head forever
Haha, thank you. I agree :P This is one of our favourite ones as well. All thanks to that cat!
All the videos about Swedish vowel sounds were very helpful, with clear explanations and examples. And lots of fun at the same time, of course! 😄
Thanks a lot!
So happy to hear that!
Hey, the 5 second clip where you said rösta and rosta was a helpful part, the back to back repeating of it in roughly 5 seconds is good because you can just hit the left arrow key and say it along like a loop.
Thanks for the feedback! More of that in the future then 😊
Iam learning Swedish
It's really amazing 😊😍
That's great!
Very well explained i enjoy learn swedish
This sound is so beautiful. But I love your humor and pneumonic memory devices! Thank you :)
Thank you so much!
i have to learn Swedish language no matter what it takes because i love Sweden.
If you want to learn more Swedish with us you can join our Swedish courses.
Live-Zoom courses: elansutbildning.com/courses/
Online video courses: funswedish.teachable.com/courses/
I really like your channel! 😍 Keep making videos! Also, could you make a video about the pronounciation of the swedish 'h' sound as I find it pretty difficult to pronounce.
Thank you! Great suggestion!
"Öl" is also a word i German, where it means oil. So we are not the only ones to have this sound. And the short version as in French like in "deux"
And, appart from being long or short, the letter ö actually represents two sounds in Swedish. It can be open (as in öra, smör) or closed (as in öga, födelse). Just like with the ä/e-sounds, it depend on whether the vowel is followed by an R or not (hence the difference between the open lära, ära and the closed träd, läsa, for instance).
*Hungarian* short: ö, long: ő
Tack så mycket för videon!
Grazie tante :)
Here I am learning Finnish, and learning to pronounce ö from a Swedish teacher. Directly hurts in the Finnish heart :DDDDDD
Hejsan, Du är verkligen bäst. Ha en fortsatt trevlig dag. Cheers. P.S.Subbed2 🎉❤
Tack detsamma ❤
It was really helpful
Tack tack 🙏🙏
Glad to hear that
Tusen tack för en väldigt nyttig video. I fortsättningen säger jag durrarna i stället för dörrarna. Storbritannien hälsar Sverige 🙂
Nej! Att uttala ”ö” som ”u” är en oförlåtlig styggelse! 😅
thanks for the useful effort
You are welcome
Soooo. Swedish people have no trouble understanding the various dialects but if I "mispronounce" a word...! Oh, boy am I in trouble!
The double standars. I know 😅
It is very strong on the long vs short vowel thingy.
em português esse sinal é chamado "trema" ¨, mas deixou de ser usado na nova revisão gramatical. Antes usávamos sobre o "u" "ü" , somente. Agora não é mais utilizado na nossa língua.
An oil thanks
Tack👍🏻
is it the same as the german ö?
TACK SA JATTEMYCKET ! ! 🎉🎉🎉
Varsågod :)
Is it the same in Finnish?
Tack! Följa …. - is ö short or long?
Fur us the "ö" is long in följa (so it breaks the normal rule) :)
🌹
So why is the accent different in Stockholm? 😢
Och ändå är Stockholmskan bara en skugga av sitt forna jag…
Tack tack tack 💕💕💕💕💕💕
😍
It can be somewhat frustrating when people ask me to spell my son's name and they look at me like im an insane person when I get to the letter "ö" because it doesn't exist in english. Then they get even more confused when they learn it's not the letter "O" , nor is it pronounced like an "O". Then I get the people who think they know what "ö" is because they've seen german umlauts of something and don't realize it's not an O with an umlaut on top. I hope some day the swedish alphabet becomes common knowledge, because its really not that many extra letters to learn, but at the same time I do understand why it's not there yet. I guess I'm just frustrated that people dont try harder to get peoples names right. I'm lucky if my kids name is pronounced with the proper number of syllables, let alone proper pronunciation lol.
@@bwalsberg people really can’t pronounce Sven? It’s like… one of the most English Non-English name I can think of.
@@weaselqueen220 …..I would imagine it is because sv does not occur in the English language much if at all….I can’t really think of another word. The original poster has a more difficult situation 😂
No two languages are the same. Is that frustrating to you?
do swenska sounds like russian languague? or am i just haven't heard it enough?
кстати, привет =)
for example, we have sound Ё(йо), which is nearly similar to your ö
Well, we are very close, so it wouldn't be weird :D
@@FunSwedish seems logical.
I also do have another question. First time i heard Swedish language was Herr Mannelig song by Garmarna. And i'm still wondering: do people really sound like this in sweden?
And where i can find more of musical, lyrical swedish compositions? I listened to Faun ad Skald, but its not what I'm looking for.
Thank you in advance =)
@@Фываячсм-ю5е Det fanns svenska handelsmän som hade bosättningar i Ryssland, men det är omtvistat om Sverige faktiskt hade ett stort rike här.
Is it the same sound as in German?
Keinesfalls! Ö in German sounds completely different. You got to purse your lips to the max to get the real and long Ö sound. It sounds much softer than in Swedish.. at least in most cases!
Österreich. Öl. Hören.
The ö has nothing Viking. It is most frequent in French : oeuf, coeur...
It’s not because it’s common in French that it can’t be associated with a Viking war cry. On est pas les propriétaires du son « œ » mdr
So long Ö is swedish viking and short Ö is norwegian viking, And in stockholm they say U instead because they are not vikings?
Can someone translate “hor” please? Google has “hora”?
A long time ago ”Hor” was when people not married to each other had a sexual relation. ”Enkelt hor” was when only one of the persons involved was married. ”Dubbelt hor” was when both persons were married to someone else. If both persons were unmarried it was called ”skörlevnad”.
It would be way better to write this vowel as Ø. Everyone will know that Ø is not O 😀
Öl in German is oil 😂
😅😂
This is really a bad presentation of the Swedish vowel "Ö" - the teacher makes it sound similar to something you'd most likely hear from a cow. I cannot understand the point of explaining the pronounciation in that way - furthermore, she is actually pronouncing it in a way most common in the Southern parts of the country - back in the throat instead of pouting your lips (almost similar to when you intend to whistle).
No it isn't! It is a great pronunciation! It is the proper pronunciation of the letter "Ö". Du har så fel. Hon har så rätt.
You're supposed to pronounce the Ö in a different way than you did, en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96