Learn Norwegian: the Grammar Survival Guide (all you need to know)

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Learn Norwegian and focus on the essentials of grammar: instead of drowning you in the details of Norwegian grammar, let me focus on the few grammar items that are really important for starting a conversation. You want to study these items of the Norwegian grammar in order avoid misunderstandings (and in order to avoid sounding very weird).

Bored of traditional Norwegian courses?
🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴 Learn Norwegian with a fascinating story instead of boring dialogues:
🎧🎧🎧 Online video course:

Here is an overview over the video:
0.00 Understand the difference between red, yellow, and green grammar
1.15 Norwegian verbs and pronouns
4.19 Subjects versus objects
6.27 Three translations for the English "you"
7.11 How to ask questions in Norwegians
8.04 Numbers
10.36 Possessive pronouns
12.32 Plural
13.42 Past tense (preteritum)
17.23 Comparing
19.23 Should you ignore yellow and green grammar?
19.36 Grammatical genders in Norwegian
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Learn Norwegian with a fascinating story instead of boring dialogues:
🎧🎧🎧 Online video course:
📘📘📘 Textbook: www.skapago.eu/nils

TheNorwegianSchool
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The best teaching of Norwegian on the net !

AndyHarpist
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Takk for interessant og nyttig informasjon.

ЛюдаРезниченко-бо
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Absolutely must-watch video for anyone learning norsk!

moorcock
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Thank you, that is an interesting approach to divide grammar aspects in red, yellow, green, this calms me down that not all mistakes are a total disaster and I can still speak Norsk even if there are some.

inesec
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This was so helpful. Thank you for the video.

maleahlock
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Great video, Werner! Thanks for posting it. I have your excellent first book, "The Mystery of Nils, " and I do DuoLingo every day (for 3 years now), and often STILL don't know why some sentences have "for å" or "til å" combination and others will have just the "å" and the infinitive. Sometimes it's just the infinitive without the "å." Also, are there any clear rules for when to use på, til, for, and i? For example, why is it "til frokost" and not "for frokost"? In English, we say "What are you having FOR breakfast?" I always think of "til" as "to, " but I realize it can mean "for." "Med" (other than the obvious "with") can also present problems.

victoza