I have to say that these videos are great - I visited Norway last June, and chain listened to the series of learn Norwegian in 3 minutes videos, and it was really helpful in making me feel more confident in handling Norwegian :) thanks!
+Mike Raven I do the same when traveling. I'm visiting Norway in September of this year, any recommendations and or insights from your visit? I'd love to hear them if you have the time.
+BananaSquid well, everything is relatively expensive (at least in relation to the UK) as their wages are higher, most of their shops take euros as well as norwegian kroner so if you have any spare euros feel free to take them. I actually didn't find much need to speak Norwegian, everyone I met just seemed to assume to speak English, and it may just have been the people I spoke to but most of them didn't really seem to appreciate me trying to speak Norwegian - they just expected to speak English! but it's an absolutely beautiful place, we visited Stavanger, Geiranger, and Bergen, and they were all great. do go on some guided tours if you get chance, the red 24 hr hop on/hop off buses are pretty good for taking you round the cities and giving you some background info.
Mike Raven Thanks for the info! It is quite expensive there and I've made a couple choices that'll cut costs. Like staying at airbnb's that charge about 25 usd a night and purchasing a round trip flight from Miami to Oslo that totals 397 usd. When I saw the price of coffee was much higher than starbuck's already overpriced coffees (20 kroner - 50 kroner) I knew I'd have to budget correctly given I'm a student and I am only doing clerical work. It seems that the average meal tends to be around 24 dollars if you eat out at a cheap place. Britain is expensive too but I was able to eat for cheap by using grocery stores for food and by staying at airbnbs. Berlin was the cheapest city I've stayed in. I'll have to do the red bus tours when I'm out there. They had a similar bus tour in Krakow and in Prague. They seem to be everywhere.
+Kjetil Andre Holen Hi Kjetil Andre Holen, Thank you for posting! We are glad to hear you are enjoying our videos. Let us know if you have any questions. Cheers! Ida Team NorwegianClass101.com
i understand and can read norwegian (of course its because im danish) but i can really talk it because right now i just add a norwegian accent to danish XD
These are great videos. How long do you think it will take for my teen kids to learn in order to go study in Norway? Thank you so much or tusen takk :D
How to say thank you politely in Norwegian In this lesson, you'll learn how to say thank you politely in Norwegian. Subscribe to our TH-cam channel for more videos! th-cam.com/video/unkUccQ31-w/w-d-xo.html
Learn Norwegian - Norwegian in Three Minutes - Norwegian Manners Learn to say Thank you politely in Norwegian with our Norwegian in Three Minutes series! Subscribe to our TH-cam channel for more videos! Learn Norwegian - Norwegian in Three Minutes - Norwegian Manners
NEW Video Lesson! Norwegian in Three Minutes - Norwegian Manners In this lesson, you'll learn how to say thank you in Norwegian. Subscribe to our TH-cam channel for more videos!
hey, I got a question? why haven't you uploaded more "cultural videos" I've seen that you have only grammatical videos and I think it could be good and helpful if we can increase our knowledge of the norwegian culture such as special celebrations and so on :)
As a Norwegian myself, I see that she speaks in a different way than I do. That's because Norwegian is so different from place to place. For example when saying "Tusen takk, så hyggelig av deg" she says all the letters. The place i live er would say "Tusen takk, så hyggli a dæi"(thats not how we write, bur how we say) I just think it's important for everyone learning Norwegian :)
I'm from Brazil too, and some years ago, I met a nice lady from Norway. One thing that I remember about norwegian is how to count from 1 to 10. In a lesson I saw in the internet, the way the words were pronounced were quite different from what I remember. "One "is "en". The lady I met would say it like "Ah-een", similar to how you say "Einstein". In the internet, it was like "Eh-een", similar to "train"
+Kyle Triebold It's not really slang. It's more an expression of surprise when something bad happens. Say you see a toddler falling over you would say "uffda", it's basically like saying "oh, no" in english ;)
language is very different from country to country simply because the word "takk" in Norwegian if you ompare in Somalia it means "go" to say somebody in arude way
bit.ly/3xWw9zu Click here and get the best resources online to master Norwegian grammar and improve your vocabulary with tons of content for FREE!
when watching skam makes want to learn Norwegian....
same
the woman in this video is also called Noora hahah
literally me
The only reason why I want to learn Norwegian😂
Erika sameee
Damn, I've done at least 6 minutes of norwegian now and I'm not fluent yet. It's almost like effort is important. Weird.
dont judge me
Her voice is so relaxing. 😍
Tusen Takk Nora!
Tusen takk for leksjonen
I have to say that these videos are great - I visited Norway last June, and chain listened to the series of learn Norwegian in 3 minutes videos, and it was really helpful in making me feel more confident in handling Norwegian :) thanks!
+Mike Raven I do the same when traveling. I'm visiting Norway in September of this year, any recommendations and or insights from your visit? I'd love to hear them if you have the time.
+BananaSquid well, everything is relatively expensive (at least in relation to the UK) as their wages are higher, most of their shops take euros as well as norwegian kroner so if you have any spare euros feel free to take them. I actually didn't find much need to speak Norwegian, everyone I met just seemed to assume to speak English, and it may just have been the people I spoke to but most of them didn't really seem to appreciate me trying to speak Norwegian - they just expected to speak English! but it's an absolutely beautiful place, we visited Stavanger, Geiranger, and Bergen, and they were all great. do go on some guided tours if you get chance, the red 24 hr hop on/hop off buses are pretty good for taking you round the cities and giving you some background info.
Mike Raven Thanks for the info! It is quite expensive there and I've made a couple choices that'll cut costs. Like staying at airbnb's that charge about 25 usd a night and purchasing a round trip flight from Miami to Oslo that totals 397 usd.
When I saw the price of coffee was much higher than starbuck's already overpriced coffees (20 kroner - 50 kroner) I knew I'd have to budget correctly given I'm a student and I am only doing clerical work. It seems that the average meal tends to be around 24 dollars if you eat out at a cheap place. Britain is expensive too but I was able to eat for cheap by using grocery stores for food and by staying at airbnbs. Berlin was the cheapest city I've stayed in.
I'll have to do the red bus tours when I'm out there. They had a similar bus tour in Krakow and in Prague. They seem to be everywhere.
Norwegian is a memorable language as compared to other languages. One can learn it fast
Tusen takk!
Tusen takk
tusen takk! :)
Hello! I love learning new languages, and this has helped me a lot!
love this. norwegian is very musical!
tusen takk så hyggelig av dag
deg*
Hai
Tusen takk.
"Do you know what CS means?" I almost died laughing, my guess is that the next lesson will involve the norwegian gaming community :P
+Kjetil Andre Holen Hi Kjetil Andre Holen,
Thank you for posting! We are glad to hear you are enjoying our videos. Let us know if you have any questions.
Cheers!
Ida
Team NorwegianClass101.com
CS... Lewis?
Gaming is a. Community in norway
I can speak a little bit of Norwegian from Duolingo but I didn’t understand how it worked though.
I understand it better using this :)
Tusen takk! (first response in Norwegian :) )
nice and easy , tusen takk
Takk.
In Britain even now many people use "Ta" to mean thank you, just goes to show how close the languages are.
"thousand tas"
thanks for that!
Is noora a common norwegian name or what
yeah its like the name sarah or jenna in scandinavian countries. super common.
Most common with only one O (Nora)
i understand and can read norwegian (of course its because im danish) but i can really talk it because right now i just add a norwegian accent to danish XD
så takk for sist
Takk hjelpen
Brilliant !
Glad you like it :)
Tusen Takk
Omg haha Noora from SKAM hahah jk.
I died when she said her name is Noora haha
These are great videos. How long do you think it will take for my teen kids to learn in order to go study in Norway? Thank you so much
or tusen takk :D
They probably don't need to learn Norwegian, we all speak English well, more or less :)
Even in college? I mean, can they get a college degree there, speaking only English?
camille yui At universities where they have exchange students, yes, I think so :)
CstcGaming Thank you so much :)
Takk , Sees
there's a few similarities with frysian :) (which i speak)
Hey im from haugesund in norway hei jeg er fra haugesund i norge?
Hvor i haugesund bur du?
egentlig karmøy vormedal
kur tu esi?
Anyone want help to noewegian
I Would love to! I just started, so basicaly I don't no anything! I am studing these lessons daily through.
Anyone notice the noice in the background it's creeping me out
😂😂
Eg likar ikkje ''bogmaal''
鬱鬱 hvorfor det?
Koffor?
You are so beautiful and very pretty
hahahah I learnt in two minutes
Are all norwegian women so good looking? :}
YEs thats why im happy to be norwegian even though im a boy im still good looking like all other norwegians. LOL bragging at its finest
actually, there are far better looking women in Norway. Her looks would be average there.
Andres Karel Great, when can I move in? :}
Acually . . better.
She's average. She's like how 5th graders look like. 8th and 9th are off limits
You're super cute!
How to say thank you politely in Norwegian
In this lesson, you'll learn how to say thank you politely in Norwegian. Subscribe to our TH-cam channel for more videos! th-cam.com/video/unkUccQ31-w/w-d-xo.html
+Learn Norwegian with NorwegianClass101.com
Hi :) excuse me, what's the main song at the beginning of the video??
Learn Norwegian - Norwegian in Three Minutes - Norwegian Manners
Learn to say Thank you politely in Norwegian with our Norwegian in Three Minutes series! Subscribe to our TH-cam channel for more videos! Learn Norwegian - Norwegian in Three Minutes - Norwegian Manners
Takk sees
NEW Video Lesson!
Norwegian in Three Minutes - Norwegian Manners
In this lesson, you'll learn how to say thank you in Norwegian. Subscribe to our TH-cam channel for more videos!
hey, I got a question? why haven't you uploaded more "cultural videos" I've seen that you have only grammatical videos and I think it could be good and helpful if we can increase our knowledge of the norwegian culture such as special celebrations and so on :)
i dont even understand her english #rip
+Wat tha fack that's your problem since I can clearly understand it and english isn't my native language.
English is my native language..... that's not my problem
Wat tha fack oh excuse me and other foreign people who have accent.
As a Norwegian myself, I see that she speaks in a different way than I do. That's because Norwegian is so different from place to place. For example when saying "Tusen takk, så hyggelig av deg" she says all the letters. The place i live er would say "Tusen takk, så hyggli a dæi"(thats not how we write, bur how we say) I just think it's important for everyone learning Norwegian :)
NorwayG00 i'm from Brazil, and i'm learning norweigan. your opinion is very important to me. sometimes is not easy, meet people to help! thanks!!😀😀
I'm from Brazil too, and some years ago, I met a nice lady from Norway. One thing that I remember about norwegian is how to count from 1 to 10. In a lesson I saw in the internet, the way the words were pronounced were quite different from what I remember. "One "is "en". The lady I met would say it like "Ah-een", similar to how you say "Einstein". In the internet, it was like "Eh-een", similar to "train"
Cathrin It's the same in German. No one says all the letters.
@@anagabelia1903 you can learn it on memorise i think
Or if you are me ... Norwegian in eight and a half years and still learning!
+youandwhosearmy? lol
hahahaha! keep going!
Dette e d kleinasre eg har sett
Your smile and Your eyes i cant not stop waching u
+bereket taye w*nker
lol i like to watch this... even if i am norwegian though. :D
Anyone heard of the norwegian slang word Uffda?
Yes :3
+Kyle Triebold It's not really slang. It's more an expression of surprise when something bad happens. Say you see a toddler falling over you would say "uffda", it's basically like saying "oh, no" in english ;)
in two separate words. not slang
Your good teacher ilike to
Learn
language is very different from country to country simply because the word "takk" in Norwegian if you ompare in Somalia it means "go" to say somebody in arude way
That's "tag" not takk -_-
Hope to learn enough to understand the HB album I have.
takk!
Tusen takk Nora!
10q mor biles i am aster fro ethiopia
Thank you.
Tusen takk - Thank you very much.
Velbekomme - you are welcome.
Bare hyggelig - it's my pleasure/with pleasure.
Så hyggelig av Deg - how nice of you.
Tusen takk
tusen takk
TUSEN TAKK
what a difficult language 😏
Takk!
👏👏👏👏🤗🤗🤗🤗
Æ HAR KRÆFT