In Scandinavia, Nordic and Scandinavia actually means the same thing. Instead you should be fed up with how Western-Europeans (including North-America and Oceania) are taught that the idea of nationality by blood is the worst of the worse. Because the very notion that Scandinavia consist of Norway, Sweden and Denmark is based on blood, culture and language. There is no other way Demark can be considered a part of Scandinavia as Denmark is not a part of Scandinavia geographically speaking.
Like Slavic languages there are similarities between Norwegian, Swedish and Danish except that they are much more similar. Linguistically speaking, the Scandinavian languages are more or less different dialects of the same language.
As for which language to learn, Danish has by far the most difficult pronunciation to learn. I can hardly understand it myself, and studies have shown that Danish children learn to speak more slowly. So go by either one of the others (Norwegian is best of course).
@Dovenpeis But all of those countries speaks the same basic language and we can all understand eachother
airHaakon 3 weeks ago
add ( tageth1 ) if ta need help with basic words ir sentences.
ConquerOnlineVEVO 1 month ago
Your accent is so cute ahah
GasolineGodess 1 month ago
@rambamrashi and why did you move to Israel? Of all the countries in the world.
fdesouchecom 1 month ago
/watch?v=fbZj2pY3kpc&feature=channel_video_title
epic norwegian song
recsen 3 months ago
"No way"??? weird name for a country
Im from "Oh my gosh"
trifulquita15 4 months ago
In Scandinavia, Nordic and Scandinavia actually means the same thing. Instead you should be fed up with how Western-Europeans (including North-America and Oceania) are taught that the idea of nationality by blood is the worst of the worse. Because the very notion that Scandinavia consist of Norway, Sweden and Denmark is based on blood, culture and language. There is no other way Demark can be considered a part of Scandinavia as Denmark is not a part of Scandinavia geographically speaking.
Dovenpeis 4 months ago
Like Slavic languages there are similarities between Norwegian, Swedish and Danish except that they are much more similar. Linguistically speaking, the Scandinavian languages are more or less different dialects of the same language.
As for which language to learn, Danish has by far the most difficult pronunciation to learn. I can hardly understand it myself, and studies have shown that Danish children learn to speak more slowly. So go by either one of the others (Norwegian is best of course).
Dovenpeis 4 months ago
I think that as long as one can afford it - to buy products made in your country is important for the economy
the problem begins only when people cannot afford it - which means the economy is not balanced
sorry for that lolz
very cool vid
MagicalSunrise1984 4 months ago
@thomaslenior
thanks for the info
MagicalSunrise1984 4 months ago