If you see a long German or Swedish word, first of all, don't panic. It's more scared of you than you are of it. Secondly, take a closer look and you'll see it's actually just three normal words in a trenchcoat, huddling together to deter predators (French and English).
@Loukas it’s a Selbstverteidigungsmechanismus!
@gedankenstuecke well that's easy for you to say
@Loukas as my partner’s (kindergarden-aged at the time) nephew who’s a Spanish native speaker once said: “poor guy, can you imagine? Having to learn German as a child?”
@gedankenstuecke @Loukas The worst dialects are those where you painstakingly hold your breath at the end of every syllable and don’t actually finish saying it.

@pteranodo
Try Danish! We skip half the syllables entirely.

The rest we painstakingly end in what can best be described as a sound triangulated to the exact midpoint between sigh, mumble and murmur.

If you know a Germanic language you can decipher written Danish pretty well. It's just that we gave up on pronounciation.

@gedankenstuecke @Loukasmastodon.nu

@notsoloud @pteranodo @gedankenstuecke I've read that in worldwide comparison, Danish children are slowest to learn to speak because of that. (The theory was that the rate "information pro spoken syllable" is pretty high in Danish, if I remember correctly.)