Okay, here's the story. Danish Phonetics is way different than it's northern cousins, Swedish and Norwegian. Swedes and Norwegians can speak to each other with a good degree of understanding between them. Now Norwegians can read Danish, without a problem, because Danish and Norwegian spellings are almost the same. Now, once you can figure out how the Swedish spellings switch over to Danish, then learn the sounds, you should have no problems at all. Now if you learned Norwegian first, you'd have a slightly easier time trasitioning.
2007-12-30 04:10:36
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answer #1
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answered by Timothy 4
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Danish phonetics is very different from its Scandinavian siblings, and there is some truth to the saying that Danes sound as if they have a potato stuck in their mouth while speaking. Written, the difference between the languages isn't that big, however spoken, most Swedes have a hard time understanding Danes, and vice versa.
2013-10-30 19:36:58
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If your basic Swedish is good, you won't have a problem to learn Danish. People from both countries can talk to each other in their languages without a translator. I was even listening to long and lively "mixed" interviews on Radio stations of both countries.
2007-12-29 23:11:50
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answer #3
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answered by otto saxo 7
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No. They consume aebelskievers, and every body else eats danishes. Soylent inexperienced is Danes. Whether this can be a "jelly" stuffed one, or those with "cheese", you're a cannibal. I will supply you a temporary geographical, culinary excursion of the arena: Swedish Fish are stuck off the coast of Sweden, turkeys roam unfastened-variety in Turkey, (and truthfully run the federal government), and McNuggets are captured within the Galapagos islands, with the entire different freakish animals.
2016-09-05 14:27:40
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answer #4
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answered by widman 1
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hi.. You can ask me, if you like, i´m from Denmark.
2007-12-29 13:44:31
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I like them with cream cheese for breakfast.
2007-12-29 13:35:48
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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