Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (2024)

Swedish is a North Germanic language spoken by about 10 million people in Sweden (Sverige). In 2007 there were 290,000 native speakers of Swedish in Finland, and 2.4 million second-language speakers. In 2010 there were an estimated 300,000 Swedish speakers in countries other than Sweden or Finland. Many live in the USA, UK, Spain and Germany, and also in other Scandinavian countries, France, Switerland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Canada and Australia.

Swedish is closely related to Norwegian and Danish, and is mutually intelligible with them to a large extent, particularly in its written form.

Finland was ruled by Sweden from the 12th century until 1809. During that period, Swedish was the main language of government and education there. Today Finnish and Swedish have equal status as official languages in Finland.

Swedish at a glance

  • Native name: svenska [svɛnːska]
  • Language family: Indo-European, Germanic, North Germanic, East Scandinavian, Continental Scandinavian
  • Number of speakers: c. 10.2 million
  • Spoken in: Sweden, Finland, Estonia
  • First written: AD 1225
  • Writing system: Runic script (9th-11th century), then the Latin alphabet
  • Status: official language in Sweden and Finland

There used to be Swedish-speaking communities in Estonia (Estland). About a thousand of those Swedes migrated to southern Ukraine after Estonia became part of the Russian Empire in the 18th century. They set up a village there known as Gammölsvänskbi (Old Swedish Village), which is now part of Zmiivka (Зміївка). Only a few elderly residents still speak Swedish there. During World War II other Swedish-speakers fled from Estonia to Sweden. Only a few people in Estonia still speak Swedish today.

Between 800 and 1100 AD, a dialect of Old East Norse known as Runic Swedish was spoken in Sweden. It was written with the Runic alphabet. It differed only slightly from the Old East Norse dialect of Denmark, or Runic Danish. The two languages began to diverge during the 12th century.

Swedish first appeared in the Latin alphabet in 1225 in the Westrogothic law (Äldre Västgötalagen), the code of law used in the province of West Gothland (Västergötland). The language of this text is known as Early Old Swedish klassisk fornsvenska or äldre fornsvenska), which was used until about 1375. It was grammatically much more complex than modern Swedish.

Between 1375 and 1526 the language of Sweden was known as Late Old Swedish (yngre fornsvenska). It had undergone much grammatical simplification and a vowel shift, and by the 16th century it had more in common with modern Swedish. During this time Swedish borrowed many words from Latin, Low German and Dutch.

The translation of the Bible into Swedish in 1526 is seen as marking the beginning of modern Swedish. It helped to establish a consistent orthography for Swedish, although the spelling used in the translation was not completely consistent. For example, the letters ä and ö were used in place of æ and ø, and å replaced o in many words.

Modern Swedish spelling rules were created by the author Carl Gustaf af Leopold, who was commissioned to do so by the Swedish Academy (Svenska Akademien). His proposal was publish in 1801, and finally adopted by the Academy in 1874. The spelling was reformed in 1906, and that reform was only fully supported by the Swedish Academy in 1950.

Swedish alphabet (Svenska alfabetet)

Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (1)

Note

W and Z are used in loanwords and proper names.

Hear the Swedish alphabet:

Swedish pronunciation (Svenska uttal)

Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (2)

Notes

  • c = [s] before e, i or y, [k] elsewhere
  • ch = is pronounced [k] in the word och (and), or not pronounced at all
  • g = [j] before e, i, y, ä or ö, [g] elsewhere
  • gn = [gn] at the beginning of words, [ŋn] elsewhere
  • k = [ɕ] before e, i, y, ä or ö, [kʰ] elsewhere
  • sk = [ɧ] before e, i, y, ä or ö, [sk] elsewhere
  • rg = [rg, ʀg] before a, o, u, å, [rj, ʀj] elsewhere
  • lg = [lg] before a, o, u, å, [lj] elsewhere
  • r, rd, rg, rl, rn, rs and rt: the pronunciation on the left is used in northern and mid-Sweden while the pronunciation on the right is used in southern Sweden.
  • The pronunciation of sj/sch/sk/skj/stj (known as "the sje-sound") varies considerably throughout Sweden. In southern Swedern it is [xʷ], but in the north of Sweden it is [ʂ] (and it thus falls together with rs in these areas). The pronunciation of tj/k/kj (known as "the tje-sound") is generally [ɕ], but some speakers who have [xʷ] for the sje-sound have [ʃ] for the tje-sound. In the pronunciation of native Swedish speakers from Finland the sje-sound is [ʃ] while tje-sound is [tʃ].
  • Two other letters are used: é [ẽ:] and ü [ʏ].

For more details of Swedish pronunciation see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_alphabet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_phonology

Download an alphabet chart for Swedish (Excel)

Sample text in Swedish

Alla människor är födda fria och lika i värde och rättigheter. De är utrustade med förnuft och samvete och bör handla gentemot varandra i en anda av broderskap.

Hear a recording of this text by Anders

Another version of this text by Glenn Brude

Alla människor är födda fria och lika i värdighet och rättigheter. De är utrustade med förnuft och samvete och bör handla gentemot varandra i en anda av broderskap.

Hear a recording of this text by Glenn Brude

Translation

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
(Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights)

Sample videos

Information about Swedish | Useful phrases | Silly phrases | Numbers | Colours | Family words | Time | Weather words | Idioms | Tongue twisters | Tower of Babel | Books about Swedish on: Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk [affilate links]

Links

Information about Swedish language and culture
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_language
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_alphabet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_phonology
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_orthography
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Norse#Old_East_Norse
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Swedish
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Swedish

Online Swedish lessons
http://www2.hhs.se/isa/swedish/
http://www.onlineswedish.com
http://www.personal.psu.edu/adr10/swedish.html
http://www.ielanguages.com/swedish.html
http://www.sweol.com
http://polymath.org/swedish.php
http://ilovelanguages.org/swedish.php
http://lingohut.com/en/l89/learn-swedish
http://www.swedishpod101.com/

Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (3)

- SwedishPod101.com - Learn Swedish with SwedishPod101
- Swedish learning software
- Learn Swedish with Glossika
- Find Swedish Tutors with LanguaTalk

Swedish Flashcards
http://www.swedish-flashcards.com

Swedish phrases
http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/other/quickfix/swedish.shtml
http://travelphrase.com/swedish-phrasebook.php
http://www.101languages.net/swedish/basics.html
http://linguanaut.com/english_swedish.htm
http://www.transparent.com/languagepages/Swedish/SwPhrases.htm
http://www.speaklanguages.com/swedish/phrases/basic-phrases
http://www2.hhs.se/isa/swedish/chap2.htm
http://www.learn-swedish-language-software.com/phrases/FSSwedish.htm

Online Swedish dictionaries
http://folkets-lexikon.csc.kth.se/folkets/folkets.en.html
http://www.freedict.com/onldict/swe.html
http://www.freelang.net/online/swedish.php
http://g3.spraakdata.gu.se/saob/
http://en.bab.la/dictionary/swedish-english/
http://www.tshwanedje.com/dictionary/thai_svensk_ordbok/

Online Swedish Radio
http://www.sr.se
http://www.listenlive.eu/sweden.html

Online Swedish news
http://www.dn.se
http://www.gp.se
http://www.svd.se
http://www.sydsvenskan.se
http://www.onlinenewspapers.com/sweden.htm

Project Runeberg - a volunteer effort to create free electronic editions of classic Nordic (Scandinavian) literature: http://runeberg.org

Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (4)

Germanic languages

Afrikaans, Alsatian, Bavarian, Cimbrian, Danish, Dutch, Elfdalian, English, Faroese, Flemish, Frisian (East), Frisian (North), Frisian (Saterland), Frisian (West), German, Gothic, Gottscheerish, Gronings, Hunsrik, Icelandic, Limburgish, Low German, Luxembourgish, Mòcheno, Norn, Norwegian, Old English, Old Norse, Pennsylvania German, Ripuarian, Scots, Shetland(ic), Stellingwarfs, Swabian, Swedish, Swiss German, Transylvanian Saxon, Värmlandic, Wymysorys, Yiddish, Yola, Zeelandic

Languages written with the Latin alphabet

Page last modified: 17.08.22

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Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (5)

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Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (11)

Swedish language, alphabet and pronunciation (2024)

FAQs

How can I practice Swedish pronunciation? ›

Speak with native speakers

The most effective way to practice your Swedish accent and pronunciation is with native Swedish speakers. They will guide you on the correct pronunciation and help you to polish your accent.

Do Swedes pronounce W as V? ›

It's also noteworthy that in Swedish, w is a double-v not a double-u. Just realized how weird it is we call it double-u when it is a double-v. Language is weird.

What is ö called in Swedish? ›

Ö in other languages

Its name in Finnish, Swedish, Icelandic, Estonian, Azeri, Turkish, Turkmen, Uyghur, Crimean Tatar, Hungarian, Votic and Volapük is Öö [øː], not "O with two dots" since /ø/ is not a variant of the vowel /o/ but a distinct phoneme.

What is the full Swedish alphabet? ›

The 29 letters of this alphabet are the modern 26-letter basic Latin alphabet (⟨a⟩ to ⟨z⟩) plus ⟨å⟩, ⟨ä⟩, and ⟨ö⟩, in that order. It contains 20 consonants and 9 vowels (⟨a e i o u y å ä ö⟩).

How do you pronounce an A with two dots over it in Swedish? ›

The A with two dots (Ä) is pronounced like the english word "air", whereas the A with the ring (Å) is pronounced "oar", there is also an O with two dots (Ő) which is pronounced "eugh" - or something rather similar, there isn't really an equivalent sound in English.

Is Swedish A hard language to learn? ›

The most significant benefit of mastering Swedish is its close relation to other Germanic languages, which makes it one of the easiest languages for English speakers to learn. There are lots of similar features in grammar, syntax, and vocabulary with English, French, and German.

What language is Swedish similar to? ›

Swedish is a Scandinavian language like Danish and Norwegian, and is also very similar to English and German. The Swedish alphabet is like the English one, but it has three extra letters – å, ä, and ö.

Why is J pronounced as Y in Swedish? ›

Because in Swedish, j-sounds turned into y-sounds. There used to be a distinction in Swedish between affricates and fricatives (ch-sounds and sh-sounds, or dj-sounds and y-sounds). There still is, in some dialects (e.g., in Finland, and Blekinge). But this distinction was lost.

How long does it take to learn Swedish? ›

So according to CEFR standards, you could reasonably achieve conversational fluency, which is typically aligned with B2 level, within 540–620 hours of concentrated study. At a consistent pace, this is doable over a 12–24 month period.

Why is Swedish K pronounced sh? ›

When K is followed by a soft vowel (E, I, Y, Ä, Ö) it is pronounced like SH-sound (sh-ljud). That is why Hemköp is pronounced as hemSHöp and Kärlek as SHärlek. Ps: there are exceptions (undantag) to the rule like Kex and Keps.

Why does Swedish use å and Ö? ›

Æ and Ø were used in all three Scandinavian languages from the 12th century onwards and came into the languages as soon as the Latin alphabet was adopted. Æ imported from Anglo-Saxon and Ø a local adaptation of the Latin Œ. German printers brought their native Ä and Ö to Sweden in the early 16th cent…

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