Basically no.
I'm German and could not understand a Swede, and vice versa.
I have a friend who's Swedish and she also speaks German very fluently (although her English isn't that good.) She says Swedish is closest to Danish, and German is a bit like Dutch.
Languages that have similar sentence structure to English include German, Dutch, and Swedish.
Yes, the word "taxi" is spelled the same in German and Swedish. Both languages borrowed the term from English.
Languages that are similar to English include German, Dutch, and Scandinavian languages like Swedish and Norwegian. These languages belong to the same Germanic language family as English and share some common vocabulary and grammar structures.
no it is definitly not ( I am from Germany. but it sounds danish or swedish.
The most similar languages to English are Dutch, German, and Scandinavian languages like Swedish and Danish. These languages belong to the same Germanic language family as English and share many similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and sentence structure.
Languages that have similar sentence structure to English include German, Dutch, and Swedish.
The word 'koch' is not Swedish, but German. Koch means 'cook' or 'chef' in German.
From German via Yiddish meaning to nibble. Similar to a Danish word Naske and Swedish Snaske
No. Swedish
Hello! When I sterted the German language, the only thing I found difficult was rolling my "R". Many words in the German language are similar to words in the English language since both English and German are Germanic languages, meaning that they are related. I find German slightly similar to Swedish, Finnish and Norwegian. I can also recognise words in Dutch, as both Dutch and German are similar languages.
The Y is similar to the German ü, pronounced somewhat as a rounded ee.Stad is pronounced with a long, low and open a sound.
German: Deutschland, Swedish: Tyskland, English: Germany
German? Swedish?
"Swiss" is not a language.
No, it is German.
No its German.
German? Swedish?