Hello there
Can anyone help me with some grammer of the Danish Language
Would really appreciate it! :]
Hello there
Can anyone help me with some grammer of the Danish Language
Would really appreciate it! :]
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[
I would appriciate it too! I really want to learn that language..For now i just can sing some songs.But pretty difficult language...
Isten, áldd meg a magyart! <3
Hey, there
Nice that you want to learn it too, heheSooo I hope that someone will reply and give some help
![]()
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[
i am fluent in danish (my mom is danish) if u have specific questions u can ask me but i don't think i'd be a very good teacher otherwise. i can translate lyrics and letters, etc.hope this helps.
Actually i dont think even if you can teach us somethings about danish it wouldnt be enough without pronounciations...But thank you for your help! I will try to learn it by the lyrics![]()
Isten, áldd meg a magyart! <3
Well, without pronunciations it would be very hard, I agreeBut thanks for the reply
![]()
Still if anyone can teach us the language, with all the stuff... like alphabet, pronunciations, tenses and so on is very very welcomed
by the way ~~Pınar~~ can you suggest me some danish songs ?![]()
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[
I'm willing to help you guys learn Danish grammar (even though it'd probably be a crime against humanity)Lol I don't understand why people wanna learn Danish at all I mean don't you think it sounds too rough?!
Anyways, personal opinions put aside, I think we should start with the pronouns.
Just ask in case there's something you don't understand![]()
Nominative
Singularis
1st person: jeg (I)
2nd person: du (or "De" which is the polite form, notice that it's written with a capital letter) (you)
3rd person: han, hun, den/det (he, she, it)
Ex. 1: Vil De (NB polite form) være så venlig at række mig smøret?
(Would you be so kind to pass me the butter?)
Ex. 2: Jeg er rask, han er syg. (I am well, he is ill.)
Pluralis
1st person: vi (we)
2nd person: I (or "De", polite form) (you)
3rd person: de (they)
Akkusative
Singularis
1st person: mig (me)
2nd person: dig (or "Dem", polite form) (you)
3rd person: ham, hende, den (det) (him, her, it)
Pluralis
1st person: os (us)
2nd person: jer (or "Dem", polite form) (you)
3rd person: dem (them)
Dative
Singularis
1st person: mig (me)
2nd person: dig (or "De", polite form) (you)
3rd person: ham, hende, den (det) (he, her, it)
Pluralis
1st person: os (us)
2nd person: jer (or "Dem", polite form) (you)
3rd person: dem (them)
Last edited by PlainChaos; 08-10-2009 at 04:16 PM.
Hey PlainChaos thanks for the reply![]()
I will read your post carefully and try to get all of the things![]()
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[
I think it would be good if you put also the alphabet with the pronounce of the words![]()
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[
PlainChaos! you are perfect! But i actually didnt understand whats akkusative or dative ????![]()
Isten, áldd meg a magyart! <3
Why am I seeing that thread now?![]()
@ velvet_sky Как се зариби да учиш Датски?![]()
하늘의 별 따기...
등잔 밑이 어둡다!
Ами ми по една или друга причина направих темата за езика, защото и аз не знам... интересен ми се стори...![]()
И все пак знам, че е доста труден език, надявам се да има някой, който може да ни обясни г/д нещата
А иначе ти нещо от езика разбираш ли ?![]()
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[
Accusative: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accusative_case
Dative: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dative_case
How you pronounce the letters depends on which words they are used in.
Especially D and G quite often appear as silent letters, that is, that you either don't read them or pronounce them differently than normally.
A is not always pronounced the same.
Ex. 1 Appelsin (orange) here it's pronounced like the A in Apple.
Ex. 2 And (duck) here it's pronounced like the A in Amber.
NB: From now on let's say that the big A symbolizes the appelsin A (ex. 1) and the little a symbolizes the and A (ex. 2) to make it easier to explain pronounciation.
Although ex. 2 as might appear as capital letters (first letter of a word) (like in our example and) they appear more frequently in the middle of a word, unlike ex. 1 As, which also might appear in the middle of a word, but are more often to be seen as the capital letter. This is not an official rule, though. There might be exceptions.
B is pronounced the same way as in English.
C is pronounced like S.
D same as in English, but as mentioned before, D sometimes appears as a silent letter (except when it's used as the capitel letter).
Ex. 1 Danse (dance) here the D is pronounced like in English, because it's the capital letter.
Ex. 2 Led (mean, nasty) here the last letter is a silent D and it's pronounced like this [-ijd] (at least that's my best suggestion, it's difficult to explain foreigners how we really pronounce the silent Ds and Gs in Danish, but I'm trying to do my best).
E same as in English.
F same.
G might also appear as a silent letter, but when it's used as the capital letter it's pronounced the same way as in English.
Ex. 1 Gulerod (carot) notice the silent D (hence last letter). Here G is pronounced the same way as in English. [gullöroijd].
Ex. 2 Mening this is like in English meaning, the G is silent. Other examples: enig [e-nee] (agree), and words ending with -ning like roning (rowing), flytning (moving, relocation), also words ending with -ling like kylling (chicken). These silent Gs in Danish are actually pronounced the same way as with the silent Gs in English, e.g. ring, skying, flying, smoking, killing etc.
H same as in English.
I is pronounced like this [ee].
J is pronounced like the Y in English.
K same as in English.
L same.
M same.
N same.
O same.
P same.
Q same.
R might appear as a silent letter, just like in English, like in the word argument. But when it appears in verbs in present tense it's pronounced like [-Ah]. Ex: henter [hen-tAh] (bringing), spiser [spee-sAh] (eating), elsker [el-skAh] (loving) etc.
S same as in English.
T same.
U pronounced like [oo].
V same as in English.
W same, but rarely used in Danish.
X same, but rarely used.
Y pronounced like [ü].
Z like in English, but rarely used in Danish.
Æ is pronounced like in the first letter of the name Elizabeth.
Ø pronounced [ö].
Å is kinda pronounced like the English U or the O, it's somewhat like in the word understand, or over, or like in Osama lol.
Last edited by PlainChaos; 08-01-2009 at 10:30 AM.
Soo let's continueCan you write some useful phrases and so on ?
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[
Like what? Idioms? or everyday speech?
Give me some examles and I'll tell you how we say it in Danish![]()
Yeah, everyday speechLike going to the shop, asking how to get to somewhere and so on
also maybe some verbs
and their conjuction in Present Simple at the beginning maybe
![]()
Tose Proeski - The Hardest Thing --> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRrADJ7j3E
* Agapi mou gurna pisw, Mou Leipeis... :[