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Learning Icelandic

Updated: Jan 25, 2020


I am trying to learn Icelandic. One problem is the lack of time to study and practice. Another problem is that Icelanders are so good at English!

I had high hopes that my Icelandic lessons from Sigga would flourish as I was immersed in the Icelandic language on my recent visit. However, between all the Icelanders speaking English and my fear of saying the wrong words, the only thing that multiplied was my dread.


I found the following blog post very interesting. At the same time, inside my head is the thought, “SEE!!! Icelandic is so hard to learn because of things like this.”

It is bugging me to not be practicing and working on the language but sometimes, life just gets in the way. This is something that is important to me and Icelandic lessons will resume after Christmas. Perseverance!


Here is the post from the Icelandic Language Blog:

Drop it like it’s a Ð, G, H, Þ, or a vowel.

The most confusing part of Icelandic may not actually be the grammar – although difficult – nor the spelling – it will eventually make sense – but the way Icelanders pronounce it during everyday conversations. Depending on the speaker the language may be riddled with words borrowed from English, severely mumbled or shortened to unrecognizable form. Since the shortening is the most commonly occurring one* I decided to try to explain the typical forms of it.

Words are shortened both from the beginning and the end, depending on the situation. This makes speaking faster and easier too, since some sound combinations of Icelandic are challenging even for Icelanders themselves, for example when sound Ð (= eth) is followed by Þ (= thorn). For example “Syndu þeim húsið þitt” (= Show them your house) is pronounced more like “Synduðeim húsiþitt”.

Two things happened in that sentence. First of all, if a Ð is the last letter of a word it regularly falls off in spoken tongue, especially so if it’s followed by a Þ. The sound combination is just too troublesome to pronounce as it is. Another one was that the letter Þ changed into a Ð: the pronoun that begins with it is unstressed and therefore gets the faster form of pronunciation.

Another letter that often falls off at the end of a word is G. This is because it’s often already unvoiced f.ex. in words such as “ég” or “og”, when spoken in a hurry the ends disappear completely.

Lastly vowels can be left out if there’s a two vowel combination, one at the end of a word and another at the beginning of the next one. The vowel at the end of a word is left out. For example in the sentence “Láttu okkur vita” (= Let us know) the first word loses its vowel and the sentence becomes more like “Láttokkur vita”.

The letter that most commonly disappears from the beginning of a word is H. This is in particular true with unstressed pronouns: “Kom hann með þér?” (= Did he come with you?) turns into “Komann meþér?”. The Ð falls away as well, as per the rule.

To make it a bit more challenging, when the H is left out it transforms the word into one that begins with a vowel – henni = “(h)enni”. Therefore the vowel-dropping is also necessary. “Sýndu henni að þér ert ekki sama” (= Show her that you care) becomes “Sýndenni aþér ert ekki sama”.

Sounds confusing, right? Just wait until you try to understand someone who has a habit of really brutal shortenings! In their use whole sentences turn into a few syllables which in turn may also be mumbled, in which case everything I wrote above is merely a guideline.

*The most common = everyone does it all the time, no joke.

So …. I will persevere!



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