So this is from the scripted sketch show "Kollektivet". This is the music video for their song called "ÆØÅ (Size Matters)". They've got quite a few songs in total, almost all of them good. The Kollektivet rabbithole is fairly deep, and utterly absurd, but they do a lot of their stuff in English :P
Which is weird cause the ø sound is in many english words, same with æ and prob also å. Strange that he struggles that much to say it when they literally say it in the video for him, just say what they say.
Sometimes we will write English words with Norwegian letters. The you get Bæd for bad. Børn for burn. And kåt for caught. Caught is a word everyone is having fun with, the way it sounds in Norwegian (kåt) means horny.
Swedish here so do not speak Norwegian, but Swedish and Norwegian is very similar. What I noticed when in Portugal, where my father lives since over 20 years, is that the similarity of how the letters we share (almost all) is pronounced is much closer between Swedish and Portuguese than to how they are pronounced in English. So since the letters are pronounced almost identical in Swedish and Norwegian, it may help to lean more on your Portuguese than your English pronunciation to speak Norwegian. For the meaning of words English will be much more useful than Portuguese. Disclaimer: Based on European Portuguese, I assume Brazilian Portuguese is close enough in pronunciation. After all Queens English and American English is.
Old dialect joke: "What (school) class do you attend?" Pupil one: "ÆeiA". ("Jeg er i A", I’m i (class) A") Pupil 2: "ÆeiAæå". ("Jeg er i A jeg også" - I’m i (class) A as well).
To be honest, I have no idea where this one is from... I just randomly stumbled across it a few years back, and have had it on my playlist ever since... And I felt like you could use some help 😂 You mispronounced Ø a little bit. But that's okay, it was in the middle of the two others, so I understand the sound there was a bit obscured. And I'm glad you liked the song 😄
Måneskinn is italian but one of the artist are from Denmark, and Måneskinn got its name from her scandinavian roots. Måne means Moon and Skinn (in this sense) means Light
2:57 "do they come at the end?" do you even pay attention to the thing you react to? they literally tell you during the video that it comes after xyz almost at the start of the song.
Request a video here: buymeacoffee.com/teacherpaul
Ø is NOT pronounced E 😱
Bird, burn, heard, turd, turn, you say ø al the time, you just dont know it😂
Yup.
Å like in born, corn, torn.
Æ as in bad, tad, sad.
So this is from the scripted sketch show "Kollektivet". This is the music video for their song called "ÆØÅ (Size Matters)". They've got quite a few songs in total, almost all of them good.
The Kollektivet rabbithole is fairly deep, and utterly absurd, but they do a lot of their stuff in English :P
Many foreigners struggle especially with the Ø, which is more like the wovel in "huh?" - so it should be quite easy if you think about it
Which is weird cause the ø sound is in many english words, same with æ and prob also å. Strange that he struggles that much to say it when they literally say it in the video for him, just say what they say.
Sometimes we will write English words with Norwegian letters.
The you get Bæd for bad. Børn for burn. And kåt for caught.
Caught is a word everyone is having fun with, the way it sounds in Norwegian (kåt) means horny.
Don't ever write kåt for caught 😂😂😂
It absolutely made that A1 radio earworm from 2002 so much more bearable.
Not "ÆEÅ" but "ÆØÅ". Fracking -> Frækking, Phucking -> Føkking, Rocking -> Råkking.. Ez‼️
Swedish here so do not speak Norwegian, but Swedish and Norwegian is very similar. What I noticed when in Portugal, where my father lives since over 20 years, is that the similarity of how the letters we share (almost all) is pronounced is much closer between Swedish and Portuguese than to how they are pronounced in English.
So since the letters are pronounced almost identical in Swedish and Norwegian, it may help to lean more on your Portuguese than your English pronunciation to speak Norwegian. For the meaning of words English will be much more useful than Portuguese.
Disclaimer: Based on European Portuguese, I assume Brazilian Portuguese is close enough in pronunciation. After all Queens English and American English is.
Hahahahaha catchy and educational. Amazing request!
Old dialect joke: "What (school) class do you attend?" Pupil one: "ÆeiA". ("Jeg er i A", I’m i (class) A") Pupil 2: "ÆeiAæå". ("Jeg er i A jeg også" - I’m i (class) A as well).
"Just got paid" by them is a must!
Remember that in most languages the vowels make a single sound, you are going: ei,i,æi,åo,ju, not a,e,i,o,u.
You better check out the Kollektivet`s music videos....they`re brilliant !!
A lot of Norwegian comedy will not fly in the US, due to their religious prudeness. We openly talk about sex, periods, show naked people etc.
"we've got the biggest alphabet"
Meanwhile In Slovakia.
To be honest, I have no idea where this one is from... I just randomly stumbled across it a few years back, and have had it on my playlist ever since... And I felt like you could use some help 😂
You mispronounced Ø a little bit. But that's okay, it was in the middle of the two others, so I understand the sound there was a bit obscured.
And I'm glad you liked the song 😄
Kollektivet on TV2!
Måneskinn is italian but one of the artist are from Denmark, and Måneskinn got its name from her scandinavian roots. Måne means Moon and Skinn (in this sense) means Light
Thanks!
Kollektivet is awesome. Kygos confession is also a good music video from them :)
Lot of educational scandinavians in here, to make sure you get it right.
Æ (æ) is the a in Mad! Ø (ø) is the i in Birth. Å (å) is the o in for.
ÆØÅ ❌
ÆEÅ ✔
2:57 "do they come at the end?" do you even pay attention to the thing you react to? they literally tell you during the video that it comes after xyz almost at the start of the song.
2:08 that's not how you pronounce æøå. Just listen to the way the two guys in the video say it, that's how you say it.
You still haven't learned it. you keep saying Ø wrong
@Tyler Walker