Yes, and you should consider youself very lucky because swedish is a quite useful language essential for anybody wishing to speak to swedish monolingual (I just made that word up..but hey... you get what I mean) children.
And being your swedish teacher I will consider it my first duty to provide you with copy and paste material: å ä ö
Well well! To be honest I think I would like to learn Icelandic before swedish - I think it sounds nice. Although I think swedish is easier to learn though. And more people speak it too!
Well well! To be honest I think I would like to learn Icelandic before swedish - I think it sounds nice. Although I think swedish is easier to learn though. And more people speak it too!
Me too! But unfortunately (or fortunately) I wasn't born on Iceland. I do however have some Icelandic friends so I've tried to make them teach me a little bit every now and then. It's going awful.
(and yes, Icelandic is soooo beautiful. And they have even more fun characters )
I used to work in an Icelandic bank and I was always really jealous at how nice their language sounded. It's really difficult to read though! The letters are so messed up!
I used to work in an Icelandic bank and I was always really jealous at how nice their language sounded. It's really difficult to read though! The letters are so messed up!
Yep, but it's the sounds that those letters represent that makes Icelandic so special and beautiful so I forgive them. What I like (but still would have found quite annoying if I was Icelandic I think) with Icelandic is that they make up new "nordic/icelandic" words instead of just using the international once. Like for example the word "ketchup"; in Swedish we say "ketchup" but in Icelandic one says "tomato sauce" but in Icelandic.