This is the lexical distance between Scandinavian tongues , could we stop calling these tongues languages and call them dialects now?
This is the lexical distance between Scandinavian tongues...
as if Lexical difference means anything if a sub 100 IQ Swede can't understand a Danish speaking to him in Odense
kamelåså
So Norwegian is basically Danish then
>tell me about my country
funny vid
>you need to be smart to understand a lang
m8 there are sub 90 IQ kurds speaking 4 langauges , intelligence only helps understanding grammar faster
Do u even know what cognate means?
Short and kurz are cognates,
so are beam and Baum.
These words have the same origin, but arent necessarily intelligeble or have the same meaning.
The only reason they're considered different is so nords can inflate their language count artificially
k, fun fact number 2 ; norwegian is considered a dialect by the government of sweden
yes with a hint of We wuz west norse and shit that was replaced by swedish and danish dialects
pretty much
also the only true language is danish based danes best nords
that's a synonym, cognates are words with similar origin , between languages like french and english cognates
nalytique (analytic), tomate (tomato), créatif (creative) and banque (bank).
>government of sweden
why are foreigners so obsessed with us?
>k, fun fact number 2 ; norwegian is considered a dialect by the government of sweden
no it isn't. prove it.
because you are sexy aryans
basado
because your bitches are hot as fuck
problem?
>synonym
wtf are u talking about.
listen to scots or newcastle dialect and tell me u understand everything clearly.
You mean the swedish government that helped nazis to invade and make havoc in Norway? Is it that government you mean?
jamtland is swedish clay that got NORWEIGAN'D during the 1100s and then taken back. jamska is a dialect with a slight similarity to norweigan. say nothign about norweigan being a dialect of swedish in that article.
nur weil man einen dialekt nicht verstehen kann bedeutet nicht dass es eine sprache ist.
zum beispeil koennen alle deutsche bayerish verstehen? nein, ist es eigentlich eine sprache? nein
>NORWEIGAN'D during the 1100s
>1100s
werent you guys all practically speaking old norse back then?
nah, eastern norse (swedish and danish) was quite different from norweigan back then. probably still mutually intelligeble, but diffrent.
I see
someone needs to update this than
>Old Norse was a North Germanic language that was spoken by inhabitants of Scandinavia and inhabitants of their overseas settlements from about the 9th to the 13th century.
:)
woah, so you are saying the swedish government is based and redpilled then?
yes and skåne is pretty much denmark
but they will never get it back
>Old Norse was divided into three dialects: Old West Norse, Old East Norse, and Old Gutnish. Old West and East Norse formed a dialect continuum, with no clear geographical boundary between them. For example, Old East Norse traits were found in eastern Norway, although Old Norwegian is classified as Old West Norse, and Old West Norse traits were found in western Sweden. Most speakers spoke Old East Norse in what is present day Denmark and Sweden.
so there was never a clear line between west and east norse interesting.
What other language can hire a "foreign" actor and have them speak in their own language to other members of the cast speaking their own langauge and call it a coherent movie?
I hear this practice is quite common in scandinavia cinema between swedes and norwegians and even danes
here example of what i was talking about
a swedish woman talking in her tongue to a norwegian bull
youtube.com
considering the lexical distance between spanish and portuguese is 11% , this is brutal
Argentinian and italian
youtube.com
lmao good clip, based argentinian language, but I think the italian women were speaking half spanish half italian
basado y rojopastillado
very good video what movie is that from? when i was in rome i understood like 50% of italian as a chi
it's from beepity bapity 2 director's cut