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Length: 3:38
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Som kommer å tar me med
Kommer å tar me me
Som en lavastrøm
Som kommer å drar me me
Kommer å drar me me
Ingenting kan holde me tilbake
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
En varme inni oss
Den som elske livet
En flamme for livet
Kan smelte is til vann
å lyse så vi finn fram
Kan gjøre en steinmur til sand
Nei ingenting kan holde me tilbake
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
Nei ingenting kan holde me tilbake
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
Nei ingenting kan holde me tilbake
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
Oh, nei ingenting kan holde me tilbake
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
Nei ingenting kan holde me tilbake
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
Oh, nei ingenting kan holde me tilbake
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
Vi e frie
8 just for being Norsk.
We'll just overlook the fact that she lives in Stockholm. ;-)
Hilsa
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
through the HudTranslate app:
Ingenting can hold me until I'm baked,
Ingenting can stop me,
I am fried.
(Typical Saturday morning,maybe?)
It is interesting that nearly all languages from Europe to India and even NW China stem from an original proto Indo-European language. English is a German language (Anglo-Saxons) with many other languages mixed back in. There is a History of English podcast that is very interesting if you like this kind of thing.
No, not German. That would be absurd. It is a Germanic language.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Tomasni wrote:
This is only a 5 from me
She is singing in NORWEGIAN
Segue wrote:
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
Besides, her name is so frenchy =:0
Like a whirlwind
Who will take me
Will take me
Like a lava flow
Who will drag me
Will pull me
Nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free
A warmth inside us
The one who loves life
A flame for life
Can melt ice to water
to shine so we find out
Can turn a stone wall into sand
No, nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free
No, nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free
No, nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free
Oh, no nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free
No, nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free
Oh, no nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free
We are free
She is singing in NORWEGIAN
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
She is singing in NORWEGIAN
Slur? Strong? If you are referring to the "traditional" or "old" spanish practice of cecear, it is more like the kiss of butterfly's wing against the cheek. Or eardrum—
I had to look up cecear. But yes dingleberry, I do prefer your way of expressing it. 10^3 thanks!
Slur? Strong? If you are referring to the "traditional" or "old" spanish practice of cecear, it is more like the kiss of butterfly's wing against the cheek. Or eardrum—
I find Dutch to be (from my perspective of course) a bit of a mix of Norwegian/Swedish, German and English. At least that's how I make sense of it... :)
And I find Canadian to be a mix of Virvelvind and moose calls. It's all good.
It must be pretty clear what the lyrics are about for anyone speaking English (or Dutch) so I guess you're right.
Don't understand a word, still a cool song.
But Icelandic is very hard for me to follow. Reminds me of how Spaniards slur their words with that strong 'th' sound.
For those with a Netflix account, I highly recommend the Icelandic television series "Trapped".
Norwegian is actually a pretty easy language for an English speaker to learn
It must be pretty clear what the lyrics are about for anyone speaking English (or Dutch) so I guess you're right.
Damn Norwegians have a different word for everything!
Norwegian is actually a pretty easy language for an English speaker to learn (easier than Swedish which, contra Bill, Ane Brun is not singing here).
Yup - a Sinead clone. Wonder if she likes THIS Pope?
twoplain2sea wrote:
Damn Norwegians have a different word for everything!
Google translate
As a whirlwind
Who comes to take me with
Coming to take me me
As a lava flow
That comes to drag me me
Coming to drag me me
Nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We e free
A warm inside us
Whoever love life
A flame of life
Can melt ice for water
lit as we locate
Can make a stone wall for sand
No nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We e free
No nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We e free
No nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We e free
Oh, no, nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We e free
No nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We e free
Oh, no, nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We e free
We e free
Yes I guessed because the dutch word for Virvelvind is pretty similar. Thats wervelwind and it also means a mild twister like whirlwind. If it is a dangerous twister we call it a windhoos wich translates to tornado. Litterally it means something like wind-plenty.
That makes sense. It sounds very similar too. I find Dutch to be (from my perspective of course) a bit of a mix of Norwegian/Swedish, German and English. At least that's how I make sense of it... :) But then our languages are all closely related, so we're all a mix of each other I suppose.
Yes I guessed because the dutch word for Virvelvind is pretty similar. Thats wervelwind and it also means a mild twister like whirlwind. If it is a dangerous twister we call it a windhoos wich translates to tornado. Litterally it means something like wind-plenty.
Always learning something new on RP.
Virvelvind = twister (usually a small one). Take it from a Norwegian, which is the language of the song.
Yes I guessed because the dutch word for Virvelvind is pretty similar. Thats wervelwind and it also means a mild twister like whirlwind. If it is a dangerous twister we call it a windhoos wich translates to tornado. Litterally it means something like wind-plenty.
But is it nynorsk or bokmål?
Either way, this is a good song.
Dialectic, from her hometown of Molde. Although I believe they would write in nynorsk. :)
Scandinavian languages. One day I'd love to learn one (other than Finnish, of course, which is famously difficult and unrelated to the other Scandi languages). What I really like is how Swedes, Danes and Norwegians can talk together without difficulty, perhaps because the
Strictly speaking the Finnish are not Scandinavian at all, but rather Nordic, which is a larger group of countries that of course also includes the three Scandinavian countries (Norway, Sweden and Denmark). A common mistake though.
But if you really want to learn to speak more like the old Vikings consider Icelandic. It's still very close to old Norse!
Virvelvind = twister (usually a small one). Take it from a Norwegian, which is the language of the song.
After a trip a couple of years back to a conference in Gothenburg, via Denmark (and of course the famous bridge), I came to love the sound of Scandinavian languages. One day I'd love to learn one (other than Finnish, of course, which is famously difficult and unrelated to the other Scandi languages). What I really like is how Swedes, Danes and Norwegians can talk together without difficulty, perhaps because the languages have all descended from a common Norse ancestor. So, yer average Scandinavian has at least 3 lingos and usually a better command of English than English native speakers, not to mention German. Clever folk, these Vikings
I once took a pottery class with two Danish women and a Swedish woman. They would start talking in...I have no idea across the room and the rest of us would switch our eyes from one speaker to another like we were watching space aliens playing tennis. They were pretty cool about it and echoed your statement that they Scandinavians can talk to each other pretty readily. And yes, their command of English was excellent although they all had slight accents. Very nice people too.
But it's hard for me to empathize when I hear Swedish spoken in love or anger, say in a Bergman film. That passion gets lost and the actors just sound goofy.
Great song. :-)
After a trip a couple of years back to a conference in Gothenburg, via Denmark (and of course the famous bridge), I came to love the sound of Scandinavian languages. One day I'd love to learn one (other than Finnish, of course, which is famously difficult and unrelated to the other Scandi languages). What I really like is how Swedes, Danes and Norwegians can talk together without difficulty, perhaps because the languages have all descended from a common Norse ancestor. So, yer average Scandinavian has at least 3 lingos and usually a better command of English than English native speakers, not to mention German. Clever folk, these Vikings
She moved from her home town in 1995 and spend the next few years moving between Barcelona, Oslo and Bergen. In Bergen she began writing her own material while at university (jumping between courses in Spanish, law and music) as well as making a living working in record shops and bars
pasted:
BIOGRAPHY
POSTED: 3RD JUNE, 2011
She moved from her home town in 1995 and spend the next few years moving between Barcelona, Oslo and Bergen. In Bergen she began writing her own material while at university (jumping between courses in Spanish, law and music) as well as making a living working in record shops and bars.
love her work
Great song. :-)
But is it nynorsk or bokmål?
Either way, this is a good song.
Great song. :-)
Ingenting kan stoppe me
Vi e frie
through the HudTranslate app:
Ingenting can hold me until I'm baked,
Ingenting can stop me,
I am fried.
(Typical Saturday morning,maybe?)
Norwegian's one of the easier languages for an English speaker to learn.
Nothing can hold me back
Nothing can stop me
We are free