Fresh Brunost (Brown cheese) on warm toasted bread with a glass of cold milk must be almost impossible not to like, Norwegian or not
Ah yes that was it! I will most certainly pick some up next time I visit. .
Fresh Brunost (Brown cheese) on warm toasted bread with a glass of cold milk must be almost impossible not to like, Norwegian or not
Too bad theyre a bunch of racists and neoliberal capitalists. This is a tired superficial take on feminism aka the hire more women prison guards/drone operators meme
The US has already had three, and Solberg herself noted at a press conference Friday afternoon that in the Philippines, for example, women also have held top posts including the equivalents of prime-, finance and foreign ministers. So have women in Sweden, Switzerland and Liberia, and at the EU.
Too bad theyre a bunch of racists and neoliberal capitalists. This is a tired superficial take on feminism aka the hire more women prison guards/drone operators meme
Have you ever heard of the Norwegian Oil Fund? It's the world's largest sovereign wealth fund, worth a nice $1 trillion or roughly $200,000 per citizen (yes, including children).
This thread has some really baffling posts, but that one takes the crown.
Yes, but that makes it less fun to learn Or at least, it makes understanding spoken Norwegian a lot harder. Although in my case, that might be just due to the fact that I live far from Norway and basically never use any but my reading skills. I can read Jo Nesbø well enough, but listening and especially writing and talking are much harder.Norwegian is fun, it has perhaps one of the most varied sets of dialects in the world. Especially compared to how tiny the country is.
Theres not enough PoC in Sweden to commit acts against, I presume. However, Swedes do have a predisposition to hating Armenians and the Roma.
So it isn't noteworthy when someone finally comes in 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, etc?
"Big deal"
Okay, so nobody comes after Bangladesh? That is how you want it?
Norwegian is fun, it has perhaps one of the most varied sets of dialects in the world. Especially compared to how tiny the country is.
Well, now you're basically forcing me to post that video about the Danish language.Funnily enough today it is very difficult for most Norwegians to understand Danish people speaking vocally, even when our written language is almost identical. It is something in their speech pattern that makes their pronunciation very unclear and muddy for us... we jokingly like to say that they have something stuck down their throat when they speak. Sweden on the other hand which is a bit harder to understand on paper is very easy to understand in a conversation.
This thread has been one of the strangest ones already, but nothing is as baffling or factually incorrect as this.Fresh Brunost (Brown cheese) on warm toasted bread with a glass of cold milk must be almost impossible not to like, Norwegian or not
Norway is great. A land where police officers don't carry guns, where the justice system works in the best interest of society, where health care is universal, and higher education is free. And, of course, it is a bastion of equality and tolerance.
The only thing I don't like about Norway is Oslo. For a symbol of one of the world's richest countries, its inner city is pretty poorly kept. Living costs are outrageous, and it lacks the charm of, say, Gothenburg.
If you can get used to the weather and the darkness of winter, Scandinavia is a pretty great place to live. Especially if you plan to start a family.
This thread has been one of the strangest ones already, but nothing is as baffling or factually incorrect as this.
Brunost is death.
For anyone contemplating a move to Norway let me just say that the cuisine pretty horrible, especially if you aren't fond of fish.
I don't think I've ever seen nature that stunning anywhere else though.
Brunost is the worst. Nightmare inducing shit.
Nature is great, but funnily enough Norwegian politics are generally very anti nature. Our treatment of wild animals, and carnivores in particular is absolutely shameful, and sometimes it seems that allowing any place to just be left alone by human hands is some sort of a travesty.
It's bizarre how terrified many people in this country is of nature being, you know, nature. People go on and on about how horrible it is when landscapes are being overgrown with plants in the absences of someone or something to keep things down. We need to have farms and sheep everywhere at all times or things aren't tidy and clean enough. It's laughable.
This thread has been one of the strangest ones already, but nothing is as baffling or factually incorrect as this.
Brunost is death.
For anyone contemplating a move to Norway let me just say that the cuisine pretty horrible, especially if you aren't fond of fish.
Well, now you're basically forcing me to post that video about the Danish language.
But on a more serious note, I found it quite fascinating when I, as a native German speaker who learnt Norwegian at university just for fun, was on camping holidays through Scandinavia and heard the following conversation at a campground in Sweden:
"Svensk eller English?"
"Vi æ Dansk, derfor forstår vi svensk."
"Det ska vi se!"
And I understood everything. That was quite nice. And funny, regarding the conversation.
Norway is great. A land where police officers don't carry guns, where the justice system works in the best interest of society, where health care is universal, and higher education is free. And, of course, it is a bastion of equality and tolerance.
The only thing I don't like about Norway is Oslo. For a symbol of one of the world's richest countries, its inner city is pretty poorly kept. Living costs are outrageous, and it lacks the charm of, say, Gothenburg.
If you can get used to the weather and the darkness of winter, Scandinavia is a pretty great place to live. Especially if you plan to start a family.