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SWEDISH WORD OF THE DAY

Swedish word of the day: vemod

Today's word is one that many Swedes identify strongly with.

Swedish word of the day: vemod
Today's Word of the Day article even includes a poem. Photo: Annie Spratt/Unsplash/Nicolas Raymond

If you ask a Swede to name the words that best encapsulate the Swedish psyche, vemod – originally from the German word Wehmut – may very well be among the top ten.

The closest English translation is probably melancholy, or perhaps wistfulness – it’s a kind of sorrow, lined with a longing for things that have been and are still to come. They’re not quite within your reach, but you know that they’re there, and you know they’re not yet lost.

Picture the solitude of the vast northern Swedish forests, the feeling of regret at the end of summer, the weariness as you know that spring is right around the corner but winter just won’t seem to let go, the excitement and sadness of moving to a new country.

That’s vemod.

Perhaps Swedish poet Karin Boye expressed it best in her most well-known poem:

Yes, of course it hurts when buds are breaking.

Why else would the springtime falter?

Why would all our ardent longing

bind itself in frozen, bitter pallor?

After all, the bud was covered all the winter.

What new thing is it that bursts and wears?

Yes, of course it hurts when buds are breaking,

hurts for that which grows

and that which bars.

(translation by David McDuff)

In Swedish:

Ja visst gör det ont när knoppar brister.

Varför skulle annars våren tveka?

Varför skulle all vår heta längtan

bindas i det frusna bitterbleka?

Höljet var ju knoppen hela vintern.

Vad är det för nytt, som tär och spränger?

Ja visst gör det ont när knoppar brister,

ont för det som växer

och det som stänger.

Villa, Volvo, Vovve: The Local’s Word Guide to Swedish Life, written by The Local’s journalists, is now available to order. Head to lysforlag.com/vvv to read more about it. It is also possible to buy your copy from Amazon US, Amazon UK, Bokus or Adlibris.

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SWEDISH WORD OF THE DAY

Swedish word of the day: hemnetknarka

As the Swedish property market is coming back to life, you may find yourself picking up a new, addictive habit.

Swedish word of the day: hemnetknarka

The Swedish housing shortage is real, and anyone who’s ever faced the challenge of relocating will know how easy it is to while away entire days browsing property sites – either in a desperate attempt to find somewhere, or just to gaze at houses you know you could never afford.

Hemnet is the biggest and most well-known of these (there are others, such as Booli and Boneo), and such is its appeal to home hunters that it’s given rise to its own expression: hemnetknarka.

It’s basically the Swedish version of when your addiction to property porn starts to get out of hand, but as Swedes love compound words they instead made up a one-word verb for the phenomenon.

A total of 32,233 apartments were listed for sale on Hemnet in April 2024, 40 percent more than the same month the year before and the highest number ever for a single month, so there are more opportunities than ever to hemnetknarka.

The second leg of the word, knarka, means “doing drugs”, and it’s got an interesting history.

According to Swedish author Birgitta Stenberg, she and the poet Paul Andersson invented the word in the 1950s as a sort of slang to cover up that they were talking about narcotics.

Stenberg, a journalist, author and interpreter who travelled a lot in her youth and dated King Farouk of Egypt for a couple of years in the 50s, took a liberal view on drugs. One of her many books, Rapport, even depicts her amphetamine abuse in the 60s. She passed away in 2014.

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Sweden today has one of the most conservative attitudes to narcotic use in the world, with governments on both sides reluctant to abandon their zero-tolerance attitude to drugs.

But rest assured that it’s perfectly legal to hemnetknarka. The only one who might take offence is your employer if you do it during work hours. Not that we would ever do such a thing, of course.

Examples

Många hemnetknarkar – men få vågar köpa

A lot of people look at property ads online – but few dare to buy (a headline in a Swedish newspaper)

Sitter du och hemnetknarkar nu igen?

Are you looking at property porn again?

Villa, Volvo, Vovve: The Local’s Word Guide to Swedish Life, written by The Local’s journalists, is available to order. Head to lysforlag.com/vvv to read more about it. It is also possible to buy your copy from Amazon USAmazon UKBokus or Adlibris.

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