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I've noticed one Nowegian Language Book in the stores opf my town long time ago. Now i have an excuse to finally BUY it! :w00t:

 

:kink:

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When I think about it :kink: u don't ned the "-" between the numbers

 

Tjueen :) yupp, thats it ^_^

 

Oh thanks for that :kink:

 

Oh apart from I'm actually tjuefem :manson:

 

FAIL.

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I've noticed one Nowegian Language Book in the stores opf my town long time ago. Now i have an excuse to finally BUY it! :w00t:

 

:kink:

yey! buy buy buy it :kink:

 

Buy=kjøp

 

it=den

 

kjøp kjøp kjøp den! SNILLEEEE?? :wub:

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Oh thanks for that :kink:

but you don't notice it when u prounaunce it ^_^

 

Tjueen ^_^

 

I donno how to explain how to announce our letters :(

Copy it from Pavel's book :kink:
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Copy it from Pavel's book :kink:

Yeah :D

 

its like stupid for me to say

 

A=a

B=be

c=ce

d=de

e=e

f=f

g=ge

h=hå

i=i

j=je

k=kå

L=el

M=em

N=en

O=o

P=pe

q=ku

R=r

s=es

t=te

U=u

V=ve

w=Dobbel ve

x=ex

Y=y

z=sett

æ=æ

ø=ø

å=å

 

:P

What's the å sound? Is it like "oh" in English?

 

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What's the å sound? Is it like "oh" in English?

yeah kinda :)

Jeg er bare seksten år, men jeg blir sytten om fem dager! :D

Jeg er bare nitten år, men jeg blir tjue om trettitre dager.

Yeah :D

 

its like stupid for me to say

 

A=a

B=be

c=ce

d=de

e=e

f=f

g=ge

h=hå

i=i

j=je

k=kå

L=el

M=em

N=en

O=o

P=pe

q=ku

R=r

s=es

t=te

U=u

V=ve

w=Dobbel ve

x=ex

Y=y

z=sett

æ=æ

ø=ø

å=å

 

:P

Quite similar to Tysk.

What's the å sound? Is it like "oh" in English?

 

We went to a village called Flåm, and we were told it was pronounced like Flum. The U sounded like it does in 'chum' or 'yum'. And if you're typing and can't get the å, you can use aa instead. :)

 

We spent a week in Norway last summer and it's pretty easy to get around. They're pretty used to tourists and they can spot them easily, so they'll probably speak English to you before you get to speak Norwegian. I remember I went to a 7-11 in Bergen and before I could even take my money out he asked "Would you like a bag?", and I was kinda like "Um, yes please" because I didn't know whether to answer back in English or Norwegian. :lol: That said, they love it when you speak Norwegian. :)

 

Also, if a Norwegian person asks you for something in Norwegian (it happened to us a lot, I guess we look Norwegian :lol:), you can just say "Snakker du engelsk?" which means "Do you speak English?" and they most likely do, so they'd have no problem asking you in English either. "Kan du snakke saktere, vær så snill?" = "Can you speak more slowly, please?" "vær så snill" is "please". They come in handy too.

 

They're just the little bits you get to learn very quickly when you're there, so if you do go and are still having problems remembering, you'll get the hang of it pretty quickly. :)

 

 

 

Interesting.. maybe Pavel can teach us Russian :kink:
Wow, cool... By the sound of it, I might want to move there after Eurovision :kink:
Wow, cool... By the sound of it, I might want to move there after Eurovision :kink:

After my degree :teresa:

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We went to a village called Flåm, and we were told it was pronounced like Flum. The U sounded like it does in 'chum' or 'yum'. And if you're typing and can't get the å, you can use aa instead. :)

 

We spent a week in Norway last summer and it's pretty easy to get around. They're pretty used to tourists and they can spot them easily, so they'll probably speak English to you before you get to speak Norwegian. I remember I went to a 7-11 in Bergen and before I could even take my money out he asked "Would you like a bag?", and I was kinda like "Um, yes please" because I didn't know whether to answer back in English or Norwegian. :lol: That said, they love it when you speak Norwegian. :)

 

Also, if a Norwegian person asks you for something in Norwegian (it happened to us a lot, I guess we look Norwegian :lol:), you can just say "Snakker du engelsk?" which means "Do you speak English?" and they most likely do, so they'd have no problem asking you in English either. "Kan du snakke saktere, vær så snill?" = "Can you speak more slowly, please?" "vær så snill" is "please". They come in handy too.

 

They're just the little bits you get to learn very quickly when you're there, so if you do go and are still having problems remembering, you'll get the hang of it pretty quickly. :)

 

True :) Very many people in Norway can speak english, but we have a funny accent I think. We can easy see if there is people from USA or UK :kink: I get a littel imbarrest :blush: my grandma and grandpa cant speak english :lol: and that's kinda funny how I always have to translate for them becuase many of my grandma's relatives is from USA and my dad's girlfriend is from Taiwan :lol:

Edited by Erik Rybak

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and yeah.. if you are in Norway AA=Å so.. Tone Damli Aaberge in her name aa is announced Å

 

ø=oe

æ=ae

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æ has to be the worlds coolest letter.

haha !! :wub:

 

ÆÆÆÆÆÆ :o så jævlig nasty :P

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