Moderator:Johanna
TeneReef wrote:(sj pronounced like SH in English,
preterit in -ade being pronounced as [a] etc)...
TeneReef wrote:Could someone explain the tones in -a class of nouns to me, please?
Tack
Is this correct?
2kvinna, 2kvinnan, 1kvinnor, 2kvinnorna
Grytolle wrote:TeneReef wrote:Could someone explain the tones in -a class of nouns to me, please?
Tack
Is this correct?
2kvinna, 2kvinnan, 1kvinnor, 2kvinnorna
No they all have tonaccent Completely regular too, since the first syllable is stressed and they have more than one syllable
Grytolle wrote:o.O Never noticed that! Har du några exempel?
TeneReef wrote:Why don't Southern Swedes sing with the uvular R? Is it prohibited to do so in Swedish?
Compare with Norwegians: singers who use uvular R in speech, use it when they sing as well.
Chekhov wrote:I don't know about naive worldviews, but Jurgen Wullenwhatever pisses me off to no end because of his extreme pessimism and cynicism. You'd think the world was going to end imminently when talking to that guy.
Jurgen Wullenwever wrote:It is very frequent today to switch from a -sson name to a bourgeois name. I have seen many of my former classmates do so, and even Johanna on this forum has, so I assume that these -sson names are losing ground fast.
Chekhov wrote:I don't know about naive worldviews, but Jurgen Wullenwhatever pisses me off to no end because of his extreme pessimism and cynicism. You'd think the world was going to end imminently when talking to that guy.
Jurgen Wullenwever wrote:My use of bourgeois does have any connotations here. We do have "borgerliga släktnamn", "borgerlig vigsel", and so on. If there are better terms around, I do not remember them, if I have encountered them.
Chekhov wrote:I don't know about naive worldviews, but Jurgen Wullenwhatever pisses me off to no end because of his extreme pessimism and cynicism. You'd think the world was going to end imminently when talking to that guy.
. Even if you’re not a fan of her ballad-pop (I am, I won’t deny it), no one can say the woman can’t sing. Even if the chorus begins with the line “Undo my sad”, which is as delightful an example of Swenglish as you’ll ever find.
Chekhov wrote:I don't know about naive worldviews, but Jurgen Wullenwhatever pisses me off to no end because of his extreme pessimism and cynicism. You'd think the world was going to end imminently when talking to that guy.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests