After all the Swedish bashing that took place a few weeks ago, I was inspired to learn a little about Swedish history, culture, and the language to see what all the fuss was about.
As an American living in a town in Iowa that was settled by Swedes, and coming from Swedish origins myself...I must confess that I found myself ashamed at my lack of knowledge.
What really surprised me was the language itself. I thought I knew what Swedish sounding like, but I really never listened to it before. I started listening to some Swedish language radio stations on the internet, and now I find myself listening to them all the time. Granted I have no idea what they are saying, but I am hoping to change that soon as I have recently purchased some learning materials.
I would like to keep this thread as positive as possible, so if you do not like the language that is OK, but please do not post it. If you want to bash it some more, start your own thread for that.
I would love to hear from anyone else who has started learning the Swedish language, or can speak the Swedish language who might want to help people learn? There are not many resources out there that go beyond a very basic level. And to be honest, most of the internet sources say the same thing...which is really sad that people are not more original these days.
For example, I have been working on the Swedish "k" before a soft vowel.
My book says that a "k" in front of a soft vowel sounds like the "ch" in the English word "church." And I have seen many websites say this also.
However, when I hear the audio recordings with my book...the sound is more of a "sh" as in the English word "ship."
And now I am starting to find websites with this written also.
Is this a dialect thing? Or is it just a sound that cannot be described?
As an American living in a town in Iowa that was settled by Swedes, and coming from Swedish origins myself...I must confess that I found myself ashamed at my lack of knowledge.
What really surprised me was the language itself. I thought I knew what Swedish sounding like, but I really never listened to it before. I started listening to some Swedish language radio stations on the internet, and now I find myself listening to them all the time. Granted I have no idea what they are saying, but I am hoping to change that soon as I have recently purchased some learning materials.
I would like to keep this thread as positive as possible, so if you do not like the language that is OK, but please do not post it. If you want to bash it some more, start your own thread for that.
I would love to hear from anyone else who has started learning the Swedish language, or can speak the Swedish language who might want to help people learn? There are not many resources out there that go beyond a very basic level. And to be honest, most of the internet sources say the same thing...which is really sad that people are not more original these days.
For example, I have been working on the Swedish "k" before a soft vowel.
My book says that a "k" in front of a soft vowel sounds like the "ch" in the English word "church." And I have seen many websites say this also.
However, when I hear the audio recordings with my book...the sound is more of a "sh" as in the English word "ship."
And now I am starting to find websites with this written also.
Is this a dialect thing? Or is it just a sound that cannot be described?