Actually, the way you're sayiing his name isn't correct at all. Maybe if you go american style, in scandinavian its "jynmyndyr Sigurbjoernson"
<div class="quote_poster">Quoting arre:</div><div class="quote_post">Actually, the way you're sayiing his name isn't correct at all. Maybe if you go american style, in scandinavian its "jynmyndyr Sigurbjoernson"</div> I've also only been speaking the Icelandic leanguage for a few months so I'm not the best you know.
Iceland is a very boring country... Been there some weeks ago. Nice nature, but thats all, after 3 days all I wanted to do was going home. Very cold in summer too. Maybe a weird question, but why did you speak Icelandic with him? All Icelandic people speak very well English.
<div class="quote_poster">Quoting chuck.be:</div><div class="quote_post">Iceland is a very boring country... Been there some weeks ago. Nice nature, but thats all, after 3 days all I wanted to do was going home. Very cold in summer too. Maybe a weird question, but why did you speak Icelandic with him? All Icelandic people speak very well English.</div> Well, that's your opinion of boring and that's cool. I prefer to go places for the scenery rather than a city, which is why I chose to go to the Pyr?n?es over Paris. You can find many people there but in some spots you'll find yourself completely alone. That's just golden for me. I suppose not "all Icelandic people" speak English well, obviously. But I was surprised myself he didn't speak much other than a few simple words like "hello" or "good." You're right too, I know for a fact that the majority of the country's youth speak good English. I suppose him being from a town far away from the city is a factor. I don't mind, I'm just trying to report what I seen at the games.