rottomilko wrote:
grades used to be very important to me, but i've always just got good grades without too much effort (like i did an effort but not like too much) and now i'm good as long as i get average grades haha.Â
i'm only on my first year (and it's soon over and where did the time go??) so i'm graduating in 2022Â
BloomCissi wrote:
I have thought about that, haha. But grades are really important to me (or at least they were, when I was in high school), so failing is not an option. When will you be graduating?
hahah yes the dialects is kind of different, i don't always understand all of them tbh, i speak very simmular to how you write bokmål. the spoken language is just called norwegian and the dialects is named after where they're from. Bokmål and Nynorsk is just written languages. You can't really say that you speak bokmål no, but it's very simmular to how people "with out" dialect/form areas closer to oslo speak. Melk wrote:
yes bokmÃ¥l is more inspired by danish writing and nynorsk is mostly inspired by dialects all around and a bit gammelnorsk. the languages got "verified" just with one year in between, nynorsk first and than bokmÃ¥l. i think we learn both bc of history and bc i think it could be a bit problematic to just go over to one. I think nynorsk would die out if that happenedÂ
hahaha same here! i probably should fail once so i could make myself to do an effortÂ
Ah, okay. Norwegian is such a weird language, like, if I search for dialect videos on Youtube, I'm like ??? All of them sound so different, how do you even understand each other? Reading (bokmål) is much easier, since I know both Danish and Swedish. Do you call the spoken language nynorsk and bokmål too? Like, would you say that you're speaking bokmål?BloomCissi wrote:
Oh, I remember those "teacher candidates" that came to school and held some lessons. I think you can call it internship (practice)?
Isn't bokmål almost like Danish, and nynorsk, in spite of it's name, more like "gammelnorsk"? Like more similar to Icelandic, the way it was before Danish influence? It's something about going back to the roots of the language, that's why you learn both, because bokmål is like "contaminated" by Danish, and nynorsk is more "pure". That's my guess at least.
Haha, thank you! I mean, I've never failed before, so I don't see why I should change my approach.
ooo yes, that's a good word for it, thank you! either way it was very fun and interesting. Oh, I remember those "teacher candidates" that came to school and held some lessons. I think you can call it internship (practice)?
Isn't bokmål almost like Danish, and nynorsk, in spite of it's name, more like "gammelnorsk"? Like more similar to Icelandic, the way it was before Danish influence? It's something about going back to the roots of the language, that's why you learn both, because bokmål is like "contaminated" by Danish, and nynorsk is more "pure". That's my guess at least.
Haha, thank you! I mean, I've never failed before, so I don't see why I should change my approach.
yes bokmÃ¥l is more inspired by danish writing and nynorsk is mostly inspired by dialects all around and a bit gammelnorsk. the languages got "verified" just with one year in between, nynorsk first and than bokmÃ¥l. i think we learn both bc of history and bc i think it could be a bit problematic to just go over to one. I think nynorsk would die out if that happenedÂ
hahaha same here! i probably should fail once so i could make myself to do an effortÂ
I have thought about that, haha. But grades are really important to me (or at least they were, when I was in high school), so failing is not an option. When will you be graduating?
grades used to be very important to me, but i've always just got good grades without too much effort (like i did an effort but not like too much) and now i'm good as long as i get average grades haha.Â
i'm only on my first year (and it's soon over and where did the time go??) so i'm graduating in 2022Â