Definite and Indefinite Article
All nouns in Danish are either common or neuter in gender. About 75% of nouns are of common gender, but many very frequently used nouns are neuter.
Indefinite Article (a/an)
A/an is expressed by
en with common nouns and by
et with neuter nouns. Indefinite plurals are formed by adding
-e or
-er to the singular.
|
singular |
plural |
common
neuter |
en bil |
|
a car |
et hus |
|
a house |
|
|
Some nouns remain unchanged in the plural and some others are irregular.
singular |
plural |
et rum |
|
a room |
en bog |
|
a book |
|
|
Definite Article (the)
The definite article is tagged onto the end of the noun. In the singular, common nouns take an
-en ending, neuter nouns take an
-et ending. In the plural, both take an
-(e)ne or
-(er)ne ending.
|
singular |
plural |
common
neuter |
bilen |
|
the car |
toget |
|
the train |
|
bilerne |
|
the cars |
togene |
|
the trains |
|
Here are some more examples with both definite/indefinite and singular/plural forms:
|
singular |
plural |
|
indefinite |
definite |
indefinite |
definite |
common |
en bil |
|
a car |
en skole |
|
a school |
en stol |
|
a stool |
en mus |
|
a mouse |
en chip |
|
a chip |
|
bilen |
|
the car |
skolen |
|
the school |
stolen |
|
the stool |
musen |
|
the mouse |
chippen |
|
the chip |
|
biler |
|
cars |
skoler |
|
schools |
stole |
|
stools |
mus |
|
mice |
chips |
|
chips |
|
bilerne |
|
the cars |
skolerne |
|
the schools |
stolene |
|
the stools |
musene |
|
the mice |
chipsene |
|
the chips |
|
neuter |
et hotel |
|
a hotel |
et hus |
|
a house |
et år |
|
a year |
|
hotellet |
|
the hotel |
huset |
|
the house |
året |
|
the year |
|
hoteller |
|
hotels |
huse |
|
houses |
år |
|
years |
|
hotellerne |
|
the hotels |
husene |
|
the houses |
årene |
|
the years |
|
Danish Pronouns
Learning the
Danish Pronouns is very important because its structure is used in every day conversation. The more you master it the more you get closer to mastering the Danish language. But first we need to know what the role of Pronouns is in the structure of the grammar in Danish.
Danish pronouns include personal pronouns (refer to the persons speaking, the persons spoken to, or the persons or things spoken about), indefinite pronouns, relative pronouns (connect parts of sentences) and reciprocal or reflexive pronouns (in which the object of a verb is being acted on by verb’s subject). Here are some examples:
English Pronouns |
Danish Pronouns |
Pronouns |
Pronominer |
I |
Jeg |
you |
du |
he |
han |
she |
hun |
we |
vi |
they |
de |
|
|
me |
mig |
you |
du |
him |
ham |
her |
hende |
us |
os |
them |
dem |
|
|
my |
min |
your |
Deres |
his |
hans |
her |
hende |
our |
vores |
their |
deres |
|
|
mine |
mine |
yours |
Deres |
his |
hans |
hers |
hendes |
ours |
vores |
theirs |
deres |
As you can see from the example above, the structure of the Pronouns in Danish has a logical pattern. Locate the Pronouns above and see how it works with the rest of the sentence in Dansk.
List of Pronouns in Danish
Below is a list of the Personal pronouns, indefinite pronouns, relative pronouns, reciprocal or reflexive pronouns in Danish placed in a table. Memorizing this table will help you add very useful and important words to your Danish vocabulary.
English Pronouns |
Danish Pronouns |
I speak |
Jeg taler |
you speak |
du taler |
he speaks |
han taler |
she speaks |
hun taler |
we speak |
vi taler |
they speak |
de taler |
|
|
give me |
give mig |
give you |
give dig |
give him |
give ham |
give her |
give hende |
give us |
give os |
give them |
give dem |
|
|
my book |
min bog |
your book |
Deres bog |
his book |
hans bog |
her book |
hendes bog |
our book |
vores bog |
their book |
deres bog |
Danish Articles and Demonstratives
How to say a, an, the, this, that, these and those in Danish
There are two indefinite articles (corresponding to a and an) in Danish:
en and
et. En is used with most of the nouns (words denoting people almost always use en), but you will just have to learn which article goes with which noun. The definite article (the) is not a separate word like in most other languages. It is simply a form of the indefinite article attached to the end of the noun. Note that en words ending in a vowel retain that vowel and add an -n instead of adding -en, while et words ending in -e just add a -t.
En words (common) |
Indefinite |
Definite |
en banan |
a banana |
bananen |
the banana |
en stol |
a chair |
stolen |
the chair |
en gade |
a street |
gaden |
the street |
Et words (neuter) |
Indefinite |
Definite |
et bord |
a table |
bordet |
the table |
et køkken |
a kitchen |
køkkenet |
the kitchen |
et æble |
an apple |
æblet |
the apple |
This/that is expressed in Danish by using
denne (en words) or
dette (et words) and these/those is expressed by
disse. The noun is always in the indefinite form after these demonstratives, except for when these / disse (plural) is used, in which case an er is added (unless the words already ends in an r) after the indefinite demonstrative.
this banana = denne banan
that table = dette bord
these streets = disse gader
these apples = disse æbler
Danish Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns
with en words |
with et words |
with plural words |
my / mine |
min |
mit |
mine |
your / yours |
din |
dit |
dine |
his / her / its / their |
sin |
sit |
sine |
his / his |
hans |
hans |
hans |
her / hers |
hendes |
hendes |
hendes |
its / its |
dens |
dens |
dens |
our / ours |
vores |
vores |
vores |
your / yours |
deres |
deres |
deres |
their / theirs |
deres |
deres |
deres |
The same forms are used for possessive adjectives that are used directly before nouns and for possessive pronouns that replace a noun. For example,
this is my car and
this is mine would be translated as
det her er min bil and
det her er min.
Sin,
sit and
sine can only be used when the third person possessive adjective refers to the subject of the same clause. These words can be translated as his, her, its or their. Generally, if you cannot insert “own” after the possessive adjective in English, you cannot use sin/sit/sine.
Per besøger sin mor. = Per visits his (own) mother. (Sin refers back to Per.)
Eva ringer til hans mor. = Eva calls his mother. (Hans refers to Per, not Eva.)
The Verbs Be and Have in Danish
at være – to be
|
I am |
jeg er |
I was |
jeg var |
you are |
du er |
you were |
du var |
he is |
han er |
he was |
han var |
she is |
hun er |
she was |
hun var |
it is |
den er |
it was |
den var |
it is |
det er |
it was |
det var |
one is |
man er |
one was |
man var |
we are |
vi er |
we were |
vi var |
you are |
De er |
you were |
De var |
they are |
de er |
they were |
de var |
at have – to have
|
I have |
jeg har |
I had |
jeg havde |
you have |
du har |
you had |
du havde |
he has |
han har |
he had |
han havde |
she has |
hun har |
she had |
hun havde |
it has |
den har |
it had |
den havde |
it has |
det har |
it had |
det havde |
one has |
man har |
one had |
man havde |
we have |
vi har |
we had |
vi havde |
you have |
De har |
you had |
De havde |
they have |
de har |
they had |
de havde |
To form the future tense of verbs, just add
vil before the infinitive.
Jeg vil være= I will be;
hun vil have = she will have; etc. However, the present tense can often be used with adverbs of time to indicate the future. The word
skalcan also be used in place of vil, but this implies a promise rather than a general future condition.
To make a sentence negative, simply add
ikke after the verb. If there is a modal verb and a main verb (such as vil and an infinitive),
ikke goes between these two verbs. In addition, if you answer “yes” to a negative question, you must use
jo instead of
ja.
DANISH GLOSSARY
Hej! |
Hi |
Goddag |
Hello (formal) |
Hvordan har du det? |
How are you? |
Hvad så? |
What’s up?
(informal) |
Farvel |
Good bye |
God morgen |
Good morning |
God nat |
Good night |
Tak! |
Thank you |
Undskyld mig |
Excuse me |
Jeg elsker dig |
I love you |
Essential Danish:
English |
Danish |
Hello |
Goddag / Hej |
Good evening |
Godaften |
Goodbye |
Hej hej |
See you later |
Vi ses senere |
Yes |
Jo |
No |
Nej |
Excuse me! |
Undskyld ? |
Thanks |
Tak |
Thanks a lot |
Mange tak |
Thank you for your help |
Tak for hjœlpen |
Don’t mention it |
Det var så lidt |
Ok |
Okay, det er I orden |
How much is it? |
Hvor meget koster det ? |
Sorry! |
Undskyld |
I don’t understand |
Jeg forstår det ikke |
I get it |
Jeg har forstået |
I don’t know |
Det ved jeg ikke |
Forbidden |
Forbudt |
Excuse me, where are the toilets? |
Undskyld, hvor finder jeg toiletterne ? |
Happy New Year! |
Godt nytår! |
Happy birthday! |
Tillykke med fødselsdagen ! |
Happy holiday! |
God højtid |
Congratulations! |
Tillykke! |
|
|
English Greetings |
Danish Greetings: |
Hi! |
Hej! |
Good morning! |
God morgen! |
Good evening! |
God aften! |
Welcome! (to greet someone) |
Velkommen! |
How are you? |
Hvordan har du/ de det? |
I’m fine, thanks! |
Jeg har det fint, tak! |
And you? |
Og dig/ dem? |
Good/ So-So. |
Godt/ Sådan nogenlunde. |
Thank you (very much)! |
Tak! (Mange tak!) |
You’re welcome! (for “thank you”) |
Du/ de er velkommen! |
Hey! Friend! |
Hej! Ven! |
I missed you so much! |
Jeg har savnet dig/ dem så meget! |
What’s new? |
Hvad så? |
Nothing much |
Ikke meget. |
Good night! |
God nat! |
See you later! |
På gensyn! |
Good bye! |
Farvel! |
Asking for Help and Directions |
|
I’m lost |
Jeg er faret vild. |
Can I help you? |
Kan jeg hjælpe dig/ dem? |
Can you help me? |
Kan du/ de hjælpe mig? |
Where is the (bathroom/ pharmacy)? |
Hvor er (toilettet/ apoteket)? |
Go straight! then turn left/ right! |
Gå lige ud. Drej derefter til venstre/ højre! |
I’m looking for john. |
Jeg leder efter John. |
One moment please! |
Et øjeblik! |
Hold on please! (phone) |
Et øjeblik! |
How much is this? |
Hvor meget koster den/ det? |
Excuse me …! (to ask for something) |
Undskyld mig… |
Excuse me! ( to pass by) |
Undskyld! |
Come with me! |
Kom med mig! |
How to Introduce Yourself |
|
Do you speak (English/ Danish)? |
Taler du/ de (engelsk/ dansk)? |
Just a little. |
Kun en smule. |
What’s your name? |
Hvad er dit/ deres navn? |
My name is … |
Mit navn er… |
Mr…/ Mrs.…/ Miss… |
Hr…/Fru…/Frøken… |
Nice to meet you! |
Hyggeligt at møde dig/ dem! |
You’re very kind! |
Du/ de er meget venlig! |
Where are you from? |
Hvor er du/ de fra? |
I’m from (the U.S/ Denmark) |
Jeg er fra (USA/ Danmark) |
I’m (American) |
Jeg er amerikaner. |
Where do you live? |
Hvor bor du/ de? |
I live in (the U.S/ Danmark) |
Jeg bor i (USA/ Danmark) |
Did you like it here? |
Kan du/ de lide det her? |
Denmark is a wonderful country |
Danmark er et fantastisk land. |
What do you do for a living? |
Hvad arbejder du/ de som? |
I work as a (translator/ businessman) |
Jeg arbejder som en (oversætter/ forretningsmand) |
I like Danish |
Jeg kan lide dansk. |
I’ve been learning Danish for 1 month |
Jeg har lært dansk i en måned. |
Oh! That’s good! |
Oh! Det er godt! |
How old are you? |
Hvor gammel er du/ de? |
I’m (twenty, thirty…) years old. |
Jeg er (tyve, tredive…) år gammel. |
I have to go |
Jeg er nødt til at gå. |
I will be right back! |
Jeg er straks tilbage! |
Wish Someone Something |
|
Good luck! |
Held og lykke! |
Happy birthday! |
Tillykke med fødselsdagen! |
Happy new year! |
Godt nytår! |
Merry Christmas! |
Glædelig jul! |
Congratulations! |
Tillykke! |
Enjoy! (for meals…) |
Velbekomme! |
I’d like to visit Denmark one day |
Jeg kunne tænke mig at besøge Danmark en dag. |
Say hi to John for me |
Sig hej til John fra mig. |
Bless you (when sneezing) |
Prosit! |
Good night and sweet dreams! |
God nat og drøm sødt! |
Solving a Misunderstanding |
|
I’m Sorry! (if you don’t hear something) |
Undskyld! |
Sorry (for a mistake) |
Jeg beklager. |
No Problem! |
Intet problem! |
Can You Say It Again? |
Kan du/ de sige det igen? |
Can You Speak Slowly? |
Kan du/ de sige det langsomt? |
Write It Down Please! |
Vær venlig at skrive det ned! |
I Don’t Understand! |
Jeg forstår ikke! |
I Don’t Know! |
Jeg ved det ikke! |
I Have No Idea. |
Jeg har ingen anelse! |
What’s That Called In Danish? |
Hvad hedder det på dansk? |
What Does “gato” Mean In English? |
Hvad betyder “undsklyld” på Engelsk? |
How Do You Say “Please” In Danish? |
Hvordan siger man “please” på dansk? |
What Is This? |
Hvad er det? |
My Danish is bad. |
Mit dansk er dårligt. |
I need to practice my Danish |
Jeg har brug for at øve mit dansk. |
Don’t worry! |
Bare rolig! |
Danish Expressions and Words |
|
Good/ Bad/ So-So. |
Godt/ Dårligt/ Sådan nogenlunde |
Big/ Small |
Stor/ Lille |
Today/ Now |
I dag/ Nu |
Tomorrow/ Yesterday |
I morgen/ I går |
Yes/ No |
Ja/ Nej |
Here you go! (when giving something) |
Værsgo! |
Do you like it? |
Kan du/ de lide den? |
I really like it! |
Jeg kan virkelig lide den! |
I’m hungry/ thirsty. |
Jeg er sulten/ tørstig. |
In The Morning/ Evening/ At Night. |
Om morgenen/ om aftenen/ om natten |
This/ That. Here/There |
Denne/dette / den/det. Her/ der |
Me/ You. Him/ Her. |
Mig/ dig/ dem. Ham/ Hende |
Really! |
Virkelig! |
Look! |
Se! |
Hurry up! |
Skynd dig/ dem! |
What? Where? |
Hvad? Hvor? |
What time is it? |
Hvad er klokken? |
It’s 10 o’clock. 07:30pm. |
Klokken er 10. Klokken 7:30. |
Give me this! |
Giv mig den/det! |
I love you! |
Jeg elsker dig/ dem! |
I feel sick. |
Jeg føler mig dårlig. |
I need a doctor |
Jeg har brug for en læge. |
One, Two, Three |
En, to, tre |
Four, Five, Six |
Fire, fem, seks |
Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten |
Syv, otte, ni, ti |
Danish Conversation:
English |
Danish |
Hello. How are you? |
Hej, hvordan har du det ? |
Hello. I’m fine, thank you |
Hej, jeg har det fint, tak |
Do you speak Danish? |
Taler du dansk ? |
No, I don’t speak Danish |
Nej, jeg taler ikke dansk |
Only a little bit |
En lille smule |
Where do you come from? |
Hvor er du fra ? |
What is your nationality? |
Hvor kommer du fra ? |
I am English |
Jeg er englænder |
And you, do you live here? |
Og hvad med dig, er du herfra ? |
Yes, I live here |
Ja, jeg bor her |
My name is Sarah, what’s your name? |
Jeg hedder Sarah, hvad hedder du ? |
Julian |
Jeg hedder Julien |
What are you doing here? |
Hvad laver du her ? |
I am on holiday |
Jeg er på ferie |
We are on holiday |
Vi er på ferie |
I am on a business trip |
Jeg er på forretningsrejse |
I work here |
Jeg arbejder her |
We work here |
Vi arbejder her |
Where are the good places to go out and eat? |
Er der nogle gode steder at spise ? |
Is there a museum in the neighbourhood? |
Er der et museum her i nærheden? |
Where could I get an internet connection? |
Hvor jeg jeg gå på internettet ? |
The Time
What time is it?: Hvad er klokken?
It’s ? o’clock.: Klokken er ?
Today: i dag
Tomorrow: i morgen
Early: tidlig
Monday: mandag
Tuesday: tirsdag
Wednesday: onsdag
Thursday: torsdag
Friday: fredag
Saturday: lordag
Sunday: sondag
Numbers
Zero: nul
One: en
Two: to
Three: tre
Four: fire
Five: fem
Six: seks
Seven: syv
Eight: otte
Nine: ni
Ten: ti
CONVERSATION 1
John and Mette meet at Mads’ party |
John: |
Hej. Jeg hedder John. |
|
|
Hi. I’m John |
Mette: |
Hej, Mette. |
|
Hi. Mette |
John: |
Fed fest, hva’? |
|
|
Nice party, huh? |
Mette: |
Ja, det er det. |
|
|
Yes, it is. |
Hvor kender du Mads fra? |
|
|
How do you know Mads? |
John: |
Vi arbejder sammen. |
|
|
We work together |
Mette: |
Er du også lærer? |
|
|
Are you also a teacher? |
John: |
Ja, det er jeg. |
|
|
Yes, I am. |
Jeg arbejder som vikar her i København. |
|
|
I’m working as a substitute teacher here in Copenhagen. |
Mette: |
Kommer du fra København? |
|
|
Are you from Copenhagen? |
John: |
Nej, jeg er faktisk ikke dansker. |
|
|
No, I’m actually not a Dane. |
Jeg kommer fra Namibia. |
|
|
I’m from Namibia. |
Mette: |
Er det rigtigt? |
|
|
Really? |
Hvor spændende. |
|
|
How exciting. |
Hvor længe har du været i Danmark? |
|
|
How long have you been in Denmark? |
John: |
Jeg har været her i næsten tre måneder. |
|
|
I’ve been here almost 3 months. |
Mette: |
Men du taler da flot dansk! |
|
|
But you speak Danish very well. |
John: |
Tak. |
|
Thanks. |
Mine forældre er danskere. |
|
|
My parents are Danes. |
Min mor bor her og min far bor i Namibia. |
|
|
My mother lives here, and my father lives in Namibia. |
Jeg kom for at besøge min mor. |
|
|
I came to visit my mother. |
Mette: |
OK. |
|
OK. |
Kommer du så fra Windhoek? |
|
|
Are you from Windhoek, then? |
John: |
Nej, jeg kommer fra Swakopmund. |
|
|
No, I’m from Swakopmund. |
Det er en lille by. |
|
|
It’s a small town. |
Hvad med dig? |
|
|
How about you? |
Mette: |
Nå, jeg er bare almindelig dansker. |
|
|
Oh, I’m just an ordinary Dane. |
Jeg er fra Aarhus, men jeg bor i København. |
|
|
I’m from Aarhus, but I live in Copenhagen. |
John: |
Hvad laver du? |
|
|
What do you do? |
Mette: |
Jeg er skuespiller. |
|
|
I’m an actress |
Danish Audio Lessons