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Norse Mythology Pronunciation differences! Thor was not his REAL NAME!
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236,412 Views • Jan 27, 2024 • Click to toggle off description
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Do you Like Thor?

Did you know in norse mythology they pronounce name differently?

Today, people from Nordic countries tried to find out norse mythology Pronunciation differences!

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Views : 236,412
Genre: Entertainment
Date of upload: Jan 27, 2024 ^^


Rating : 4.82 (311/6,605 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2024-05-15T18:47:39.984751Z
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YouTube Comments - 1,645 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@beorlingo

3 months ago

In Sweden we say "Oden", not "Odin". Edit: as I can't respond to not so clever posts in this here thread due to what I reckon is standard South Korean censorship, I will probably delete this comment with all its 150 responses. After all maybe South Korea isn't all that different from the North!?

1.6K |

@gonun13

3 months ago

It's pretty obvious that Iceland being an island far from European mainland really helped in keeping that old norse feeling alive. It sounds great.

563 |

@DeusExHonda

3 months ago

English also had þ and ð, but the printing press killed them. The thorn (þ) was represented with y so English speakers mistakenly thought old printing would say things like "ye olde taverne" when it was actually saying "þe olde taverne" (the old tavern)

194 |

@Patralgan

3 months ago

It's indeed a bit awkward for Finns since many of those usually aren't discussed because we have our own mythology and characters

514 |

@JazuNeon

3 months ago

Our Finnish girly was a bit left out in the video. We obviously are aware of the Norse mythology and have been influenced by it somewhat but we are not taught about it in school or anything (maybe briefly mentioned? I don't remember being taught about Odin etc). And we don't have Finnish variations for the names of the Norse gods. In a way fun to have her there nonetheless but she is definitely approaching the subject from a certain distance. Would be fun to hear about Finnish mythology sometime cuz it is also very interesting and quite different from the Norse stuff in many ways.

367 |

@Wombatmetal

3 months ago

This was really fun. Surprised it wasn't mentioned that many days of the week in English are named after Norse gods. Tuesday - Tiu/Tyr; Wednesday - Odin/Woden; Thursday _ Thur/Thor; Friday - Frigg

261 |

@AngeloTelesforo

3 months ago

Very interesting how the girl from Iceland had so much background on the subject. I love the way Icelanders keep their language alive. I heard it’s the language that has changed the least in the past 500 years.

221 |

@grandmakida6591

3 months ago

Hey, Magda from Sweden here! I know Oden is more proper, but Odin is also a way to say it. I should've mentioned both but forgot at that moment. (Fick ingen info innan vi filmade så kunde inte förbereda) Also, I'm not sure but perhaps dialects could be a reason? Thanks for correcting and watching~

210 |

@Pahis1

3 months ago

This is a bit difficult for the Finn because you can pronounce them like they are written there (as she did) or more like Swedes would pronounce. Minor correction is finns would have Mjölnir and Asgård. I think she said Mjolnir and Asgard. Again Å isn't a finnish letter so we would have to pronounce it the swedish way. As she mentioned we have our own mythology, so we don't really have our own words for these. Interested to hear that they study this a lot in other nordic countries. We just quickly mention them in Finland. At least when and where I went to school.

122 |

@andieslandies

3 months ago

The letter that is used in Icelandic at 04:38 was previously used in Old Norse, Old Swedish, and Old English. In English, it was called 'thorn'.

39 |

@tuuli4002

3 months ago

Some of these names were a bit weird ones to pronounce as a Finn since Norse mythology is foreign mythology to us (I'm still really glad that Finland was part of this🥰🥰 Thanks!). I could sometimes get mixed up how to say these the "Finnish" way, because I would have heard how to pronounce them in English way... well that would mainly only be Thor😅 Or otherwise mix it up an accidentally pronounce it more tge Swedish way than the Finnish way😅 And I think it's also a good thing to acknowledge that Finnish is from different language group than the rest here.

71 |

@PetterVessel

3 months ago

As a norwegian, I am so happy over icelandic language. I don't understand icelandic, but I respect that language very much.

28 |

@Noah_ol11

3 months ago

As a mithology fan , i like to hear the names of characters from people of Nordic countries , even though i knew how theses words are pronounce ,the pronunciation of Mjolnir suprised me the most

88 |

@ristusnotta1653

3 months ago

Why is Finland here when talking about norse mythology? 😃

57 |

@jonasholmqvist5231

1 month ago

As people always get this confused: Modern Icelandic doesn’t sound like Old Norse. Not even a little. Both Icelandic grammar and words are very close to Old Norse, but the pronunciation has changed tremendously. (While pretty much all linguists know this very well, people in general seem unaware of it.)

42 |

@PhilDancer

1 month ago

The main thing I learned from this is that I prefer Scandinavian women over American women.

8 |

@philjones3824

3 months ago

As a lifelong fan of Norse folklore, I love to hear you folks to try fun words like Jormungandr, Yggdrasil, and Jotunheim.

14 |

@kyrpa1625

3 months ago

why was the finnish person even there? finns have finnish mythology, not norse

44 |

@Marzin86

3 months ago

love that the subtitles butcher everything

12 |

@kurean5808

2 months ago

Btw fun fact. Norway has like a billion dialects so I got genuinly confused for some of the pronounciations the norwegian girl had. Cause it's different from what I'm used to.

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