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Swedish Halloween Word Search Posted by on Oct 30, 2015 in Swedish Language, Vocabulary

It’s Halloween! Well, it’s almost Halloween. And if you’ve been following this blog for a while now, you’ll know that Halloween isn’t really a traditional holiday in Sweden. Of course, that doesn’t stop some people from celebrating. And it definitely doesn’t mean that Sweden isn’t full of spooky creatures. Just check out Steve’s Spooky Swedish Halloween vocabulary.

While you sit around waiting for trick-or-treaters, you can work on your Swedish with this Halloween word search:

L R A K L L O R T F L V F B E
H N H H D G T K L C E A F N E
D G E X Ä T I A L L D M J D R
F J H N E X D Z M W N P Z Z E
J U Ä L N D A N D E I Y V F K
X S E V E A S U R O P R G C Ö
C K J R U S M N Z L S I D V P
S Y M E Y L P E S P Ö K H U S
E U E I B M O Z I L J X Z V W
S T R Z C X L W L L S K A K Z
U B T X I K R O E T B R J F G
S F P Ä T S R W U W U H Q L D
W U L I J T G Z F L E J B U C
V E L P I V Z L V R R H I Q Z
Y X M W E U L M C Z N P B N R
ANDE (Spirit) DJÄVUL (Devil) FLADDERMUS (Bat)
HÄXA (Witch) JÄTTE (Giant) LIEMANNEN (The Grim Reaper)
SKELETT (Skeleton) SPINDEL (Spider) SPÖKE (Ghost)
SPÖKHUS (Haunted house) TROLL (Troll) TROLLKARL (Wizard)
VAMPYR (Vampire) VARULV (Werewolf) ZOMBIE (Zombie)

 

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About the Author: Marcus Cederström

Marcus Cederström has been writing for the Transparent Swedish Blog since 2009. He has a Bachelor's Degree in Scandinavian Studies from the University of Oregon, a Master's Degree in Scandinavian Studies from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and a PhD in Scandinavian Studies and Folklore from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He has taught Swedish for several years and still spells things wrong. So, if you see something, say something.


Comments:

  1. luna:

    quick question.. what’s the difference between häxa and häxan?

    • Marcus Cederström:

      @luna Häxan is the definite form of the noun so en häxa = a witch, but häxan = the witch.