TankieTanuki [he/him] to literature • 3 years agoSoviet man scaryimagemessage-square53 fedilinkarrow-up1122
arrow-up1122imageSoviet man scaryTankieTanuki [he/him] to literature • 3 years agomessage-square53 Commentsfedilink
minus-squareCatherine_Steward [she/her]hexbear13·3 years agoYeah Finnish couldn't possibly be so related to English. Have you ever seen or heard any Finnish? It's like alien speech. Absolutely uncanny. link
minus-squareTankieTanuki [he/him]hexagonhexbear7·3 years agoI knew Danish was a Germanic language and my mind kind of lumped all of Scandinavia together. link
minus-squareRam_The_Manparts [he/him]hexbear5·3 years agoBoth Sweden and Norway were under Danish rule for a good while, so that's why those three have very similar languages today. As far as I know, Norwegians and Swedes used to speak a language that was very much like what is spoken in Iceland today. link
minus-squareCptKrkIsClmbngThMntn [any]hexbear5·3 years agoShares some weird elements with Hungarian apparently, but perhaps by coincidence more than anything. link
minus-squarehart [he/him]hexbear1·3 years agosorry for responding to such an old comment but they have similarities because both are a part of the finno-ugric language family link
Yeah Finnish couldn't possibly be so related to English. Have you ever seen or heard any Finnish? It's like alien speech. Absolutely uncanny.
I knew Danish was a Germanic language and my mind kind of lumped all of Scandinavia together.
Both Sweden and Norway were under Danish rule for a good while, so that's why those three have very similar languages today.
As far as I know, Norwegians and Swedes used to speak a language that was very much like what is spoken in Iceland today.
Äitis on avaruusolio :angery:
:posadas: Indeed, comrade!
Shares some weird elements with Hungarian apparently, but perhaps by coincidence more than anything.
sorry for responding to such an old comment but they have similarities because both are a part of the finno-ugric language family
Thanks for the info!