it would be awesome if you haf a video about the changes in fast, casual speech 🙏🙏🙏 im struggling a lot with that right now, i just heard someone say something like akkeru instead of af hverju
@@DaanSnqn when speaking you can use it anytime (just as English speakers use contractions), and most written settings it’s okay. I think if you were writing an essay it would be better to use the non-contracted form.
Very helpful. I have been fuzzy on this and your video helped cement my knowledge,.
Oh, thank you for your video. It is really helpful for me. Keep it up! Please dont give it up!
Very helpful! Especially the future tense’s implied incomplete action.
Great video
Gracias! 👌
Talk more about Icelandic grammar especially declensions and hard stuff like that. thanks for the videos they help a lot! :D
Thank you Harira, what would be the most helpful way to talk about declensions?
@@icelandicforforeigners what exactly they mean, when to ue them, how you know when to use them, etc.
Thanks!
Thank you!!
You’re always so helpful! Takk fyrir!
This is great!!
And helpful it was!
it would be awesome if you haf a video about the changes in fast, casual speech 🙏🙏🙏 im struggling a lot with that right now, i just heard someone say something like akkeru instead of af hverju
Hæ! Hvernig segjum við „shortened forms“ eða „contractions“ á íslensku? Takk!
Það má kalla það "styttingar" held ég
You can also say "ætlarðu" instead of "ætlar þú", right? I've even seen it written like that when studying Icelandic (I'm only a beginner though).
Exactly! It’s very often spoken that way and you can write it that way in informal settings
@@icelandicforforeigners Thanks! Does that mean that in a formal setting I should use "ætlar þú" instead?
@@DaanSnqn when speaking you can use it anytime (just as English speakers use contractions), and most written settings it’s okay. I think if you were writing an essay it would be better to use the non-contracted form.
@@icelandicforforeigners Ok! Takk fyrir!