Swedish language

North Germanic language spoken in Sweden and Finland

Swedish (audio speaker iconsvenska ) is a language mostly spoken in Sweden and in parts of Finland, typically along the southern and western coasts and on the Åland islands. More than nine million people speak Swedish. It is similar to two of the other Scandinavian languages, Norwegian and Danish, and a person who understands one of these languages can understand the others. Other Scandinavian languages, such as Icelandic and Faroese, are less closely related and cannot be understood by Swedish speakers. Standard Swedish is spoken and written throughout Sweden, but there are some local dialects with differences in grammar and vocabulary in small towns and rural areas.

Swedish
svenska
Pronunciation[ˈsvɛ̂nskâ]
Native toSweden, Finland
Native speakers
11.1 million (2017)[1]
Indo-European
Early forms
Old Swedish
  • Modern Swedish
Latin (Swedish alphabet)
Swedish Braille
Official status
Official language in
 Sweden
 Finland
 Åland Islands
 European Union
Nordic Council
Regulated bySwedish Language Council (in Sweden)
Swedish Academy (in Sweden)
Research Institute for the Languages of Finland (in Finland)
Language codes
ISO 639-1sv
ISO 639-2swe
ISO 639-3swe
Linguasphere52-AAA-ck to -cw
Major Swedish-speaking areas
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
Spoken Swedish

Swedish began as a dialect of Old Norse, which was a language that everyone in Scandinavia understood during the Viking Age. Around the 12th century Swedish began to slowly become different from the other dialects. These dialects later became what we today call Norwegian, Icelandic, Faroese and Danish. Swedish is a Germanic language with some similarities to English because of the Vikings that invaded England in the 10th Century. It is even more similar to German and Dutch, partly because of the Hanseatic League of the Middle Ages, when Sweden traded very openly with Germany.

There are three characters in the Swedish language that are not used in English. These are å, ä and ö. The letter å is a vowel sound between [a] and [o], similar to the English word awe. The letter ä is a vowel sound similar to [ɛ], like in the English word bed. The letter ö is a vowel sound between [o] and [ɛ], pronounced [øː] like the u in the English word burn. These characters are also used in the Finnish language, while Norwegian and Danish languages replace ä and ö with similar characters æ and ø.

Swedish also has some important differences in grammar. Definite articles are suffixed onto the end of their nouns, so ett hus (a house) becomes huset (the house). Also unlike English, Swedish uses two grammatical genders called Common and Neuter. Nouns of the Common gender are sometimes called "en words", and many words for living (or once-living) things are "en words". Nouns of the Neuter gender are sometimes called "ett words".

Example of some words in Swedish

SwedishEnglish
Ett/EnOne
TvåTwo
TreThree
FyraFour
FemFive
SexSix
SjuSeven
ÅttaEight
NioNine
TioTen
JaYes
NejNo
JagI
DuYou
MigMe
HanHe
HonShe
ViWe
De/demThey/them
Jag ärI am
SverigeSweden
HusHouse
HemHome
VägWay
BjörnarBears
HjälpHelp

Basic Swedish Expressions

God dag/HejGood day/Hello
Hur mår du?How are you?
Jag mår bra, tackVery good, thank you
TackThank you
Tack så mycketThank you very much
God morgonGood morning
God eftermiddagGood evening
Hej dåGoodbye

References

Other websites