Learn Danish - The Beginning 2
Uploader Comments (Onceuponmytime)
Top Comments
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I gotta say that this danish course is very simple and easy to understand and follow!!! You must image I'm Italian and I love Danmark, Danish boys and all danish things...danish language, too. So I'm trying learning to some danish, translating all the girl says from English to Danish...It's a bit difficult but I'm followind and understanding all, right now. I hope that although thing'll get complicated I'll continue following. Danish is very different from italian...bye from Italy :P
All Comments (67)
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yes :)
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er der nogle der ved om der nogle steder online hvor man kan øver sit mundligt dansk
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thank you very much, your videos are very helpful
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Your accent seems to become Australian when you say the alphabet.
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@Onceuponmytime To help a little, is it similar to "vous" in French? It's the plural "you" that can be translated into "y'all" (you all) in English slang... right?
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@Onceuponmytime The "I" is more like you guys, or you all.
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Is there some kind of rule for the different pronunciation of the letters depending on the word they are forming? Thanks a lot, very useful video!
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Is there some kind of rule for the different pronounciation of the letters depending on the word they are forming?
I think scandinavian languages are the most beautiful! Thank you for sharing your danish! If you can speak german and english then danish isn't that hard, it's similiar to both, it is like a mix.
StephsHasenpfote94 1 year ago 5
@StephsHasenpfote94 Confirmed =)
Onceuponmytime 1 year ago
i jsut got back from denmark yesterday. the language is really hard! i noticed they swallow half the words when they talk and dont pronounce most the letters. but one questions, in some slides it says capital "i" means "you" but so does "du" so which is it?
TVjuiceboxiz 2 years ago
The Danish word "I" (capital I) means you.. But since "you" in English has got two different meanings I uderstand your problem hehe.. "Du" in Danish means "you" when you're talking to ONE person. E.g. "you are sweet". Capital "i" in Danish is in English "you" in plural - when you're talking to MORE than one person. E.g. "You guys should come visit".. Hope taht was understandable =)
Onceuponmytime 2 years ago 7
Can I Ask??
Do you know Michelle Pedersen she's from Denmark
chindamian777 3 years ago
I'm afraid not ;s
Onceuponmytime 3 years ago