The Top 5 Reasons To Learn Swedish

For starters, it’s one of the easiest languages for English speakers to learn.
Stockholm skyline reasons to learn Swedish

Thinking about learning the Swedish language? If you need a bit more convincing before you lock in your choice, we’ve compiled a list of five awesome reasons to learn Swedish. From the linguistic benefits to its alluring culture, at least one of these points is bound to resonate with you.

Five Reasons To Learn Swedish

Reason 1: Swedish Is An Easy Language To Pick Up

If you had to bet on which two Germanic former classmates would hook up with each other at the Indo-European Language High School reunion, you could bet on the Swede and the English-speaker being the first to sneak off together.

We Anglos regularly complain that foreign languages are ridiculously hard to learn. Luckily for us, Swedish is one of the easiest options. There are many similarities between our languages in terms of grammar, syntax and vocabulary. These similarities stem from the languages’ shared Germanic roots, and as an English-speaker you can take advantage of this common linguistic heritage. For instance, learning vocabulary in another language can be difficult, but you’ll be pleased to hear that there are thousands of cognates (words that sound the same and have the same meaning) in Swedish which you can cling onto like a safety blanket during your odyssé (yup, a cognate) into the language. It’s a tough call, but my favorite Swedish-English cognates have got to be detonator, exhibitionist and pudding.

Once you’ve got your tongue around those extra vowels (å, ä and ö) and you’ve managed to tune your ears into the language’s wonderfully melodic pronunciation, you’ll find yourself fluent in Swedish faster than it would take you to build an Ikea bedside table (okay, maybe not that fast).

Reason 2: Swedish Is The Key To All Scandinavian Languages

Swedish is the most widely spoken of the Scandinavian languages, boasting nearly 12 million speakers, primarily in Sweden and Finland. But choosing to learn Swedish purely on numbers alone is missing the point. The real beauty of learning Swedish is that you open the door to the other Scandinavian languages. There’s a high level of mutual intelligibility between Swedish, Danish and Norwegian, meaning speakers of one can understand speakers of the others without too much difficulty. That’s quite the nifty language hack.

We’ve covered the close relationship between Swedish, Danish and Norwegian before, so trust me when I say that if you choose to learn Swedish, you’re basically proclaiming that all Scandinavian languages are there for the taking.

@babbel

To the land of Swedish meatballs! Drop a comment with any Swedish words you know 🇸🇪 #swedish #education #language #babbel #multilingual #bilingual #polyglot #studying #travel #travelgoals #languagegoals #travelgram #edugram #languagegram #languagegeek #travelsweden #sweden

♬ original sound – Babbel

Reason 3: Sweden’s A Great Place To Live

Okay, this one’s easy to sell.

Free education and health care. High salaries. A mecca for interior design lovers. Oh, and it happens to be one of the most socially progressive societies on the planet. It’s no wonder Sweden is consistently ranked as one of the most desirable places to live in the world. So surprise, surprise, people are being tempted to up-sticks and relocate to swanky downtown Stockholm apartments or cutesy cabins deep in vales of the Swedish countryside.

Want more reasons to learn Swedish? Then how about those achingly beautiful lakes and fairytale forests? They’re enough to make a person want to escape into the wild with nothing but a Sandqvist rucksack, a few tins of pickled herrings and some Stieg Larsson novels for company.

Reason 4: Solve A Swedish Mystery

Today’s language learner is a privileged fellow indeed.

Modern technology has enabled us to craft inventive approaches to language learning, and one of the easiest (and most fun) ways to practice your Swedish is to pop on Netflix and settle down to a tense evening of epic crime drama. The Bridge, Wallander (the original), Arne Dahl… Sweden has been pumping out top-quality crime dramas with Volvo-levels of reliability. And watching these shows is a great way for you to hear native Swedish, perfect your pronunciation, and brush up on your “whodunnit” guessing skills.

Reason 5: Dig Into The Culture Like A Pro

While many Swedes will command an almost masterly level of English, you don’t want to spend your next fika sticking out like a cream tea on a smörgåsbord, do you?

If you visit Sweden, or are lucky enough to move there for work or study, then stubbornly speaking English to everyone will leave you only able to scratch the surface of the country. Yes, you can still enjoy the delights of Abba and The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo in English. But armed with Swedish, you could dive into a whole world of ice hockey, Champions League nights at Malmö and Astrid Lindgren books!

Bonus reason: So That’s What The Name Of That Ikea Furniture Means

Did you know that if you learned Swedish, you’d be able to impress all of your friends the next time you go to Ikea? But how? Well, because Ikea is a Swedish company, they inject a healthy amount of method into their madness when it comes to exporting their goods to the world. I don’t know about you, but I always thought Ikea’s naming department had a drunk Gothenburg fisherman on call 24/7 to help them come up with names for their furniture. As it turns out, the naming system for Ikea furniture actually offers you a window into the Swedish language as well.

Bookshelves and storage units are generally named after Swedish places — Finnby being the name of a bookshelf and a small town about an hour’s drive outside of Stockholm — while curtain rails are named after geometrical terms (Kvartal, for instance, means “quarter” in Swedish).

So go on, break out the knäckebröd, start learning the gorgeous Swedish language today, and you’ll be on your way to Swedifying yourself in no time. Lycka till!

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David Sumner

David Sumner hails from a small seaside town in Devon (the part of England that's so rural it puts Tolkien's Shire to shame), and he's been living in Berlin since 2010. After completing a Master's Degree in Politics at the University of Potsdam he got the itch to join Babbel and share his insights into learning languages. When he's not living the kebab-fueled Berlin dream he's rocking out to Icelandic keyboard rock, playing the drums, and escaping to the Alps every chance he gets.

David Sumner hails from a small seaside town in Devon (the part of England that's so rural it puts Tolkien's Shire to shame), and he's been living in Berlin since 2010. After completing a Master's Degree in Politics at the University of Potsdam he got the itch to join Babbel and share his insights into learning languages. When he's not living the kebab-fueled Berlin dream he's rocking out to Icelandic keyboard rock, playing the drums, and escaping to the Alps every chance he gets.