How Similar Are German and Danish?
26:54
How to Say EVEN in Danish
14:55
3 жыл бұрын
Sit, Stand and Lie in German
10:33
3 жыл бұрын
Sit, Stand and Lie in Danish
12:01
3 жыл бұрын
Modal Particles in Danish
20:16
3 жыл бұрын
The word ALTSÅ in Danish
12:55
3 жыл бұрын
The Word JO: its 3 meanings
7:52
3 жыл бұрын
The Danish Verb AT TAGE
7:40
4 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@yaroslavliutnik5594
@yaroslavliutnik5594 4 күн бұрын
Amazing work, thank you.
@tomjensen618
@tomjensen618 10 күн бұрын
Et fyr can also mean a lighthouse. En fyr can also mean a fur tree. Getting all the meanings of the same word requires memorization.
@tomjensen618
@tomjensen618 10 күн бұрын
It depends. If you are from another Germanic language you can pick it up in a year if you submerge yourself, meaning you speak only Danish. I've seen it done. To get your brain to think in Danish instead of translating from your native tongue ,will take longer, on average I would say 3-5 years.
@urae7382
@urae7382 12 күн бұрын
Just call "soft d" as "retarded l" and everyone will understand
@PadiZH
@PadiZH 12 күн бұрын
Ich finde deine Videos große Klasse. Ich versuche gerade Dänisch zu lernen. Bist du Däne oder Deutscher? Gruß aus der Schweiz, Patrick
@LB-en3ny
@LB-en3ny 14 күн бұрын
Is the middle/mid front of your tongue touching or gliding near the middle of your top palate? Or is it all glottal / back like y/j/g?
@userbjandthebear
@userbjandthebear 15 күн бұрын
Lad være med at prøve at lære andre dansk. når du ikke selv snakker det, hilsen en Dansker.
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 15 күн бұрын
hvad får dig til at tro at jeg ikke selv snakker det?
@OddRagnarDengLerstl
@OddRagnarDengLerstl 16 күн бұрын
Er bakgrunnen Rundetårn?
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 15 күн бұрын
Ja, det er så. Men man kan vel godt se at det er en fake baggrund, ikke? 🙂
@sonia94ist
@sonia94ist 17 күн бұрын
Someone tell me how to pronounce dyrt!!!
@sharonpruner3814
@sharonpruner3814 18 күн бұрын
This is great. Very helpful. Now I can pronounce some of my Danish Ancestors' names.
@cicado-ug3sq
@cicado-ug3sq 18 күн бұрын
I am danish :)
@CarstenSvendsen
@CarstenSvendsen 19 күн бұрын
I hardly even know you, would translate much better to, jeg kender dig jo knapt nok
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 18 күн бұрын
Did I say "I hardly even know you" or "I don't even know you"? I don't remember, but if I said the first one, you are totally right, your option is ideal.
@CarstenSvendsen
@CarstenSvendsen 20 күн бұрын
Hmm, det har jeg aldrig tænkt på, det er godt med en øjenåbner en gang imellem.
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 20 күн бұрын
Altså at der er så mange forskellige ord på dansk og kun et på engelsk? Ja det er jo normalt ikke noget man går og tænker over, man bruger jo bare de sprog man behersker. Men det er efter min mening altid sjovt at sammenligne sprog og se hvor fattige/rige nogle sprog er i forhold til andre når det drejer sig om hvordan man udtrykker noget helt bestemt.
@Kirill7775
@Kirill7775 21 күн бұрын
Из этого видео я понял только то, что фонетика некоторых сложных языков (вроде тех же северокавказских) не такая уж и сложная😄
@CarstenSvendsen
@CarstenSvendsen 23 күн бұрын
I usually tell people that if there's a D in the middle of the word, the word is pronounced slowly, and if it is accompanied by another consonant, the word is pronounced quickly.
@timthomson5674
@timthomson5674 24 күн бұрын
My first danish class ever. Excellent! Mange tak!!!
@Antonio_Pripisducci
@Antonio_Pripisducci 25 күн бұрын
Is your channel still alive?😢
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 25 күн бұрын
Well, I'm alive and well 🙂 and my plan is to give new life to this channel sometime in the future. When some things fall into place in my life, I will be able to make lots of new videos
@Antonio_Pripisducci
@Antonio_Pripisducci 25 күн бұрын
@@MicsLanguages Got it, I hope you will go on! Because your channel really helps me with learning danish! Mange tak from Russia :)
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 24 күн бұрын
@Antonio_Pripisducci That's great to hear! If you're interested and if it's within your budget, you can always do lessons with me. My teaching is not put on pause. You can contact me through my website. Under any circumstance, I wish you success and fun learning Danish! 😉
@maryannsalva3462
@maryannsalva3462 26 күн бұрын
❤ tusind tak!
@brendanlindsaywebb4932
@brendanlindsaywebb4932 29 күн бұрын
Stor tak, Mic! That helps me a lot with the soft d. One of the hardest parts of speaking Danish.
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 28 күн бұрын
That's great. Have fun!
@AugerHybrid
@AugerHybrid Ай бұрын
50-90 is this a joke?!
Ай бұрын
What?? Eu vim para aprender dinamarquês e descobri que você fala português!! haha que legal :D
Ай бұрын
Det var så godt!! Tak for forklaringen.
@claudiadimuccio5557
@claudiadimuccio5557 Ай бұрын
Similar to most first language English speakers in the comments, I’ve been learning Danish for a little under 140 days and have been completely debilitated by the “r” sound. This helps so much!! Thank you!!!
@FrozenMermaid666
@FrozenMermaid666 10 күн бұрын
Even though this type of Danish R is sort of related in a way to the French R, being one of the many variations of in the HR sound which is part of the ‘family’ of Rs that have some H sound to them or are said as if one tried to say an H and an R together, that’s also related to the HR sounds from Welsh and Brazilian Portuguese, it isn’t the same as the French R as it’s on the opposite end of the spectrum and pronounced with a different technique, by making the sound ‘coated’ and soft, whereas in French the Rs are always thrilled and pronounced in very sharp and hard ways and are not coated Rs, and, the other type of Danish R is also a soft type of R which is more like the er in the German word der which sounds more like dea with an R-controlled EA sound, so that R is also not the same as the French R which is technically a thrilled / hard R and a harder version of the R used by many speakers of German, in German words that don’t have ar / er / ir / or / ur letter combinations, because these letter combinations are pronounced with a soft R, and it seems like there are two or more types of soft R used in Danish, and one of them (the one at the beginning of the words and in the word fra) is also a bit similar to the regular German R when said more softly, because it seems to have a bit of an H sound to it, so it’s a variation of the HR sound, like, in the word fra, so I can see why it may seem similar to the French R because French Rs also have an H sound in there, but it’s still way softer in Danish, whereas in French it is usually pronounced very strongly and it’s very throaty in French, especially the Rs at the beginning of the French words are very hard in French and can even sound sharp like a yell / scream, so I would classify the French Rs as hard Rs that are very thrilled and throaty and even sharp like a yell sometimes, whereas Danish HR-type of Rs like in the word fra are soft and can be considered a tap, and they are more similar to the softer Rs in German, that some speakers of German are using, for example, the speaker of German from the interview videos in German that have a lot of views has a soft German accent that uses soft Rs, and sometimes they remind a bit of the Danish Rs in certain words, though I wouldn’t say they are exactly the same Rs, but more like different variations of those main types of Rs, including the R with some H sound before the R sound and the other type of R that is controlled by a vowel, so things like placement and intensity etc can slightly differ between those German Rs and the Danish Rs, even though they are related, being different variations of the same main types of Rs! there are many types of soft R, including the American R (the RWA / RWUH sound which is used in many English words, especially at the beginning of the word) and the Welsh RH sound (which is technically a soft HR sound, same as the HR sound used in many Brazilian Portuguese words, which is an H-controlled R) and the Americanized R used in Dutch (aka de gooise R, which is right between a normal soft R sound and an American R, which is related to the American R, but it is way less ‘exaggerated’ than the American R, so to speak, so it’s closer to a soft normal R than the American R is, so it’s like it is right between them) and the soft normal R which is used in Norse / Icelandic / Swedish / Norwegian / English / Dutch / Gothic / Latin / Italian / Brazilian Portuguese etc which is technically a tap (any type of soft and fast R can be considered a tap, while prolonged Rs are hard Rs because trying to prolong an R will automatically turn it into a rolled R which has that typical motor sound or engine sound to it, and, this type of R is related to the rolled R, and it is often referred to as a rolled R, but it is in fact just a soft normal R, not really a rolled R, as it has no motor sound to it, being very soft and fast and coated, and if one listens to a normal Icelandic vocal sample with normal conversation and to a Spanish vocal sample, one can hear that it’s not the same R sound, as Icelandic has soft normal Rs at the beginning of the word and in the middle of the word and extra soft normal Rs / extra soft taps at the end of the word, whereas Spanish has rolled Rs such as the R which is a normal rolled R with less motor sound to it and the RR which is an extra rolled R with more motor sound to it) and the Danish R which is a variation of the German ar / er / ir / or / ur sounds with the R sound slightly more pronounced than in German, and certain English words also have a variation of this soft R, but the vowel sound is usually more pronounced than the R sound, and they are usually referred to as R-controlled vowels, and in Danish there are also words where the R sound is less pronounced, though in some Danish words the R sound is more pronounced than the vowel that is controlled by the R or that controls the R sound, so Danish words have a mix of multiple variations of this type of soft R, which is attached to a vowel sound basically, and there is also the other type of soft R that is usually referred to as a tap what is used in many Germanic languages like English and Faroese and Swedish and Icelandic and Dutch and also in certain Brazilian Portuguese words, which is an even softer type of tap, and, there is a thin line between a soft R and a hard R! So, it’s more like a spectrum for each main type of R, and, a soft normal R can easily be turned into a rolled R by either trying to prolong or to emphasize it (because it automatically becomes rolled with the typical motor sound when prolonged / when not said fast or when one tries to emphasize the R sound, for example, when teaching pronunciation rules or words etc, as many tend to turn a soft normal R into a rolled R by emphasizing it) or by saying it in a hard / non-coated way, and it’s also easy to turn a HR-type of R from a soft HR sound into a thrilled / hard R, so, and even the American RWUH sound can be exaggerated more or said in less exaggerated ways, so there can be a lot of variation, depending on how the speaker says each type of R or on how intense / coated etc he makes the sound!
@FrozenMermaid666
@FrozenMermaid666 10 күн бұрын
To make this type of HR sound, one can start by practicing the HR in Welsh which is an H sound + R sound even though it is spellt RH, for example, the Welsh words with rh letter combination like rhad or rhosyn are in fact pronounced hrad and hrosyn (as if they were Norse words) with the H sound before the R sound, and one can also use Icelandic words like hraður / hrað / hratt / hringur / hrista / hringinn / hrífa / hríð / hrifsa / hringunum etc to practice this hr sound, and, one can also practice the German HR sound by trying to say the word anderen with a pronounced H sound only, instead of the R sound, which would sound like andehen / and-uh-h-uhn / andahan (by the way, I used the uh for the schwa sound, which is the vowel that is the first vowel in the English words alone and again, which is kinda related to an A vowel, but it’s a different vowel sound tho, but it’s not used in spelling, so I don’t have a letter for this vowel, so I just use uh to spell this sound, as it’s also the vowel used when saying uh-huh in English) and then one can try saying it again and again and adding more and more R sound to it instead of more H sound (more R sound and less H sound) while using the same technique, and then making the H sound almost impossible to hear, by adding mostly R sound which would take over the H sound, this being the way the HR is usually pronounced in German, and also, I would recommend using softer HR sounds in French and German, because pronouncing the R in a thrilled way makes it not sound good as it can be more like a mini-scream and can be too sharp, and I know that there are speakers of German that thrill the R like in French, and also speakers that use a rolled R as in Spanish, as Rs are pronounced differently by different speakers in every language, but it’s better to make the HR sounds more toned-down and soft and coated like in Danish and like in the German accent used by the speaker of German with the soprano voice from the interview videos (the ones that are teaching German by interviewing ppl and asking them various questions with both English and German subtitles that have many views) as that’s one of the prettiest German accents with very soft Rs that aren’t thrilled, so I recommend learning that accent if one is learning German - by the way, I also recommend learning Danish together with the other prettiest languages ever created Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Norwegian / Welsh / Breton / Cornish as they are equally gorgeous and are way too pretty not to know, and German and French can also be learnt on the side, and other languages too, including Óld English and Proto Germanic and Middle English and Latvian and Forn Svenska and Hungarian and Manx and Irish and Scottish Gaelic etc, which are all gorgeous with mostly pretty words, as learning many pretty languages at the same time is the most efficient way to learn languages that saves a lot of years (because it takes at least three or five years or more for one to get to a native speaker level, regardless of whether one is only learning one easy and pretty language or multiple easy and pretty languages at the same time, and up to 10 years to get to a writer level by learning automatically over thirty thousand base words in each target language, so it’s better to start learning words in all target languages in the first year of learning) and also the most fun way to learn languages!
@CAPNBEANS
@CAPNBEANS Ай бұрын
I really dont hear th i dont get that at all. Didn't understand L either but it makes more sense 😅
@FionaMarden
@FionaMarden Ай бұрын
Great explanation of the vowels. How do you say the Danish girls name Signe?
@KDGDW
@KDGDW Ай бұрын
- Jeg Ved ikke, godt hvis du forstår men ... Hvis jeg vil studere Dansk ... så har du et for eksempel, venligste vedste en bog ? - Hvis du forstår, så svar tak ...👍.
@sassmate5033
@sassmate5033 Ай бұрын
I noticed you stopped posting and I'm sad. I'm trying to learn Danish without courses for no reason at all and your channel is awesome!
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages Ай бұрын
Thank you very much. At the moment I am focusing on other things. But I want to post many more videos. Hope I'll be able to post with a certain frequency again!
@xmanvlogs3267
@xmanvlogs3267 Ай бұрын
My Poppy’s name was Aage, although when he moved to Australia he went by a different name. I don’t know which one of my family members told me how to pronounce his birth name but I’ve spent pretty much my entire life pronouncing the G in his name too 😅
@Lee-vs5ez
@Lee-vs5ez Ай бұрын
awesome videos, hope there are more coming
@CarnivoreCalculator
@CarnivoreCalculator Ай бұрын
I just watched this video 3 days ago and let me say; it is EXCELLENT. The puppet dialogue examples are particularly helpful I can already count pretty well and state 3 - 5 digit numbers. I was saying numbers in the license plates while walking dogs around the neighborhood Then while driving by cars which required me to get a little faster. Main tough thing are linking some of the sounds, but I actually really like the numbering system. Maybe it’s because I have such an affinity for maths and so I really appreciate the use of a base-20 kind of way to count.
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages Ай бұрын
The trick with the dog walking and number plates is perfect! Combine learning with your day to day activities. That's the way it should be done!
@CarnivoreCalculator
@CarnivoreCalculator Ай бұрын
@@MicsLanguages I’ve gotten pretty dang good with numbers by now to the point where I can drive by cars(less time to see the plate) and read the 3 digit numbers. I wanted to ask: in Danish, do folks sometimes read a 3-digit number as a 1-digit followed by 2-digit number, or do they always use hundrede to state the hundreds? Ex: 256 as “to saksoghalvfems” rather than “to hundrede saksoghalvfems”
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages Ай бұрын
Watch out. You wrote you're good with the numbers now, so I suppose you made a typo. 256 is not to hundrede seksoghalvfems 🧐 Regarding your question, I'd say that we use both of these options, depending on the situation.
@TheLashab
@TheLashab Ай бұрын
Thank you for the content. Can you make a video about the liaison in Danish language?
@user-xj9tb6bo8o
@user-xj9tb6bo8o Ай бұрын
You could use ergo instead
@emilylikestea
@emilylikestea Ай бұрын
Having a vocal coach & singing training has made learning new sounds in Danish easier for me because vocal training spends a lot of time thinking about tongue placement/palettes/how your throat feels when you make a sound. If you have an interest in learning Danish and singing, I definitely recommend combining those interests!
@Gooeybrowniebaby
@Gooeybrowniebaby Ай бұрын
I learned French in school and was wondering why the French had to make it so complicated when it comes to numbers. Then I started learning Danish and I thought hey French isn’t so bad.
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages Ай бұрын
Yeah some things just seem to be way more complex than they need to be. 😁 But in a way that's also what makes life interesting IMHO 🤔
@Gooeybrowniebaby
@Gooeybrowniebaby Ай бұрын
I find Danish grammar fairly easy to tackle compared to, say, French. But the phonetics and pronunciation are a nightmare.
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages Ай бұрын
Good summary :)
@rowenaabad6093
@rowenaabad6093 Ай бұрын
Very well❤
@madsmller4030
@madsmller4030 Ай бұрын
jeg er ved at forstå..I`m close to understand your Agenda..
@madsmller4030
@madsmller4030 Ай бұрын
..i at forstå
@kantamana1
@kantamana1 2 ай бұрын
the soul of danish language is in the modal particles
@sylviahewitt8609
@sylviahewitt8609 2 ай бұрын
German mother tongue, speaking Norwegian and now learning Danish pronunciation. Super impressive videos, but would be grateful for simpler sentences used as examples. Otherwise the best teacher ever *****
@CarstenSvendsen
@CarstenSvendsen 20 күн бұрын
Yeah, these sentences sure are quite hard. I don't know why he didn't just make them simpler, like, Der er kage derovre, eller, det der, det er der da ikke tid til.
@jonbilbao2207
@jonbilbao2207 2 ай бұрын
Danish: a beautiful vowel nightmare
@cynthiagrier6162
@cynthiagrier6162 2 ай бұрын
Can you please go just a bit slower? I need just a little more time. Thank you very much. This information is so helpful!
@cynthiagrier6162
@cynthiagrier6162 2 ай бұрын
Thank you! And regarding your political statement, yes, I agree that we should be censoring ourselves oreach other. We need to be able to speak our minds freely!
@garretttergerson774
@garretttergerson774 2 ай бұрын
It sounds beautiful to me, but trying to understand spoke Danish makes me feel like my brain is on roller skates
@lenajk2004
@lenajk2004 2 ай бұрын
i think i'll stick with swedish after all /j
@MauricioFranco-jf8qd
@MauricioFranco-jf8qd 2 ай бұрын
Você fala muito bem Português, parabéns.
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 2 ай бұрын
Obrigado!
@bnulusoy
@bnulusoy 2 ай бұрын
This video is perfectttttt!
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 2 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks a lot!
@Borzacchinni
@Borzacchinni 2 ай бұрын
Bom ver um outro Dinamarques que fala português!
@Earth_Engel_333
@Earth_Engel_333 2 ай бұрын
The best Dansk lære 🙏 I’m preparing my A2 exam
@MicsLanguages
@MicsLanguages 2 ай бұрын
Have fun, and good luck with the exam!