An Americans told me "ZEY DALK LYKE DEES OOH YAA BECUSS ZEY ARE SVVVEEEDISH YAAA" but they also say that about Germans.
Can I get some Swedish input on the subject?
Do you sound like Rooney Mara in the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo remake?
An Americans told me "ZEY DALK LYKE DEES OOH YAA BECUSS ZEY ARE SVVVEEEDISH YAAA" but they also say that about Germans.
Can I get some Swedish input on the subject?
Do you sound like Rooney Mara in the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo remake?
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I am a Swede living in Greece
Swedes almost have no accent
English and Swedish seem to be alike to pronounciation, is this ture? Any anons that know for a fact?
ZEY DALK LYKE DEES OOH YAA BECUSS ZEY ARE SVVVEEEDISH YAAA
youtube.com
like the lady in green in this clip
CALEB YOU FAT FUCK
i tried reading english in a swedish style of speech
vocaroo.com
And how would that sound if you just spoke the way you normally do?
Swedish is just English spoken backwards:
youtube.com
gay
That's bullshit.
Even if it's subtle I can still immediately hear when a Swede speaks English and it hurts my soul.
most are fluent but you can tell somebodies foreign 99% of the time, they're more sing-songy than Germans
>them digits
Wasted on a fucking swedepost of all things!
But I've experienced something of the same with Danglish; it's obvious and cringy to my ears, but every time I've asked a native English speaker about it, they've told me it sounds like no accent to them.
i've never noticed much of an accent from them. i think they've gotten so good at english that they've completely lost their accent in favour of sounding more british or american
Some of my more pretentious acquantancies actually affected a heavy british accent when talking english. But it's really noticable, so I think the majority of people talk with a more american accent, since it's a bit more "neutral" and it's what we learn from most shows on TV etc.
its not as dramatic as that but swedes have a very noticeable accent. Listen to fever ray for an example of what you'll commonly hear in their voices. The better their english the less its there though
yest based
Swedes can't pronounce "j" as in jay, but almost always say it like "yay"
It looks like a benis
no Scandinavian can distinguish Z from S, and neither can they pronounce CH or ZH is what I've learned from YTing
I think that this is mandatory ...