Merci beaucoup pour vôtre partage, tout comme la pédagogie que vous transmettez avec beaucoup d' empathie. Il est certain que j'aurai besoin de visionner de nombreuses fois la vidéo; Celà-dit ,avec un énorme plaisir ! Tak skal du have...😘👌👍 Céline .
This is crazy :) separate letters from The alphabet sounds one way, but in the sentence happens totally understandable sounds :D cant get logic, seems need to learn every word in every sentence :D
It is very logical, Germanic languages are the most superior and most logical languages, and the pronunciation is based on the word, what sounds best for each word, because each word has different letter combinations, and different vowels go well with different consonants / sounds etc - pronunciation rules are just to give a general idea, and they should be learned in the beginning, anyway, but actually relying on pronunciation rules is just db, pfff, not a proper way of learning a language, a language must be properly learned, by seeing and hearing each word multiple times, over a period of time (aka spaced repetition) until each word can be automatically remembered, so each word must be learned with its pronunciation and article / declensions etc!
Honestly, ppl that are łéÿ-zèè and don’t learn each word properly with its pronunciation never really get to a fluent or native speaker level in any language - to be native speaker level, one must learn over 10.000 base words (15.000+ words) with their pronunciation and must have an automatic mode in the new language, and to develop an automatic mode in a new language, one must see and hear each word multiple times, until each word can be automatically remembered, and if one hears 15.000+ words multiple times, one automatically learns the pronunciation of each word!
Tak!!! Would you consider doing a video where you show or explain how your tongue hits when you say each letter? My Amerikansk tongue is giving me a hard time with L, J, and Y. And I'm sure all of the other letters too.
L is the same as in English, and J / Y are the same sound as the Y / I in English, a normal Y / I (ih) sound, in all Germanic languages - most Danish letters are pronounced just like in English, the ER sound is like the ER in the German word der, so it sounds like EH-UH (an R-controlled schwa sound at the end) and the Z is also pronounced like in German, so it’s a soft TS sound like the TS in the English word cats and the ZZ in pizza, the NG is pronounced just like in English / Dutch / Old Norse etc, like in the English words sing / ring / singing, in all Germanic languages, and the Ø is normally an EO sound, but it can be pronounced differently, depending on the word, so sometimes it sounds like A and sometimes like O and sometimes it sounds like U or EU or something like that, and E can sound like in Dutch words sometimes, for example, the E in alfabet is pronounced the same way it would be pronounced in Dutch, like alfabeyt, so an extra Y / I sound is included between the E sound and the T sound...
Yes, in Danish the y is usually pronounced ü / yu like in German and Hungarian etc, which is the same sound as the u in Norse / Icelandic / Swedish and French and sometimes Dutch and like the uu in Dutch - it’s a sound made of two sounds, that is, normal i sound + normal u sound said together fast in one sound, so it’s technically a diphthong type of sound!
Arabic and Chinese are category 9 / 10 languages, extremely difficult, with impossible scripts and characters, and impossible confusing pronunciation, while Czech is a category 5 or 6 language, a bit harder than Russian probably!
Danish is a category 1 language, just like English / Dutch / Norwegian / Swedish / Norn / German / Welsh / Breton / Cornish / Manx / Gallo / Catalan / Galician / Italian / French / Occitan / Latin / Esperanto / Spanish / Limburgish / Yola / Luxembourgish / Aranese / Guernsey etc and most other languages based on Dutch / Norwegian / Italian / French / German etc, super easy to read / spell / learn etc with easy pronunciation that’s either similar to English or German or is more neutral like in Spanish, and Old Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / Old English and Hungarian and Slovene and Finnish / Estonian are category 2 languages because of the spelling with more accents and umlauts, but the words themselves are super easy to memorize / remember and the pronunciation is also super easy, just like those of category 1 languages, and Irish / Scottish Gaelic are category 3 languages due to the spelling with many accents and vowels that can be a bit confusing at first, but they aren’t impossible, and the words are also easy to learn, because these languages have mostly pretty words, and one tends to remember the prettier and more distinctive words faster, so pretty languages such as all these gorgeous languages are naturally easy to learn and remember!
Nah, it’s super easy, like in the German word der - it’s basically an E sound + an R-controlled schwa sound at the end that’s a bit longer or an E sound + an R-controlled A sound, one can just try imitating what one hears until one gets it right, and then practice it many times!
That depends on several factors, Sani. Your current level, your native language, how good you are at picking up languages in general, how hard you study, whether you see it as something fun or just a chore, what your motivation is, if you invest in materials, etc. If you’re really hardcore and check a lot of the right boxes, it’s possible to get to an intermediate level in around 6 months, but it could also be up to 2 years if the factors are not in your favor.
At the beginning of the word, it’s like the G in the German word gehen and like the G in the English word go, and sometimes G can be pronounced like a J / Y / I sound when it’s in the middle of the word, like the J in the German word ja or the Y in the English word yes!
In the middle of the words, the D and the G are usually silent, and sometimes the G in the middle of the word can be pronounced like a J / Y / I sound, like in the German word ja or the English word yes, and in the beginning of the word they are usually pronounced like a normal G and a normal D sound, like in the English words go and dragon!
Just because everyone speaks English, doesn’t mean one should stay monolingual, pfff - all other Germanic languages are so gorgeous, just like English, so I am learning them all!
its fcking crazy. i cant understand why forget to say some caracter in this language :D And change some caracter. for example. they say: God dag! But what you hear? Good Day :D not easy.
O & Å are the same sound basically, but sometimes O can also be pronounced like in English (with an extra U sound at the end) in certain words, and A is usually pronounced EI / EY like in English, and Æ / æ in Danish is more like an E sound, so just E without the Y / I sound, but this might depend on the word, and E can be pronounced like a normal E sound or like EY, like in alfabet (alfabeyt) which sounds just like it would be pronounced in Dutch, and I / i can sound like an E sound and also like a normal I / Y sound, depending on the word!
It has to come from down in the throat, push it up and out rather than use the front of your mouth. Start by saying "air" and then making it more forceful. Hope that helps.
@@xtraordinaryhombre I don't know so much about Dutch or French but I think it is closer to the French "r". It sounds very similar to German pronunciation too.
It’s a gorgeous language that’s like a mix of English + German pronunciation rules, it’s very enjoyable, especially the R sounds and the EY / EI sounds (just like in Dutch) and the many E sounds, super pretty!
Ah yes Æ, the AmericanEntertainment network letter
😁🤣😂🤣
Crap. I (American) had ZERO association for Æ...now I have to work harder to unseen American Entertainment 😆
1:08 1:48
0:32 5:34
2:56 5:59
0:59 1:24
have fun differentiating these
ikr
Nah danish is hard/confusing but nah (not for Danes or ppl knowing well danish)
Merci beaucoup pour vôtre partage, tout comme la pédagogie que vous transmettez avec beaucoup d' empathie.
Il est certain que j'aurai besoin de visionner de nombreuses fois la vidéo; Celà-dit ,avec un énorme plaisir !
Tak skal du have...😘👌👍
Céline .
This is crazy :) separate letters from The alphabet sounds one way, but in the sentence happens totally understandable sounds :D cant get logic, seems need to learn every word in every sentence :D
It is very logical, Germanic languages are the most superior and most logical languages, and the pronunciation is based on the word, what sounds best for each word, because each word has different letter combinations, and different vowels go well with different consonants / sounds etc - pronunciation rules are just to give a general idea, and they should be learned in the beginning, anyway, but actually relying on pronunciation rules is just db, pfff, not a proper way of learning a language, a language must be properly learned, by seeing and hearing each word multiple times, over a period of time (aka spaced repetition) until each word can be automatically remembered, so each word must be learned with its pronunciation and article / declensions etc!
Honestly, ppl that are łéÿ-zèè and don’t learn each word properly with its pronunciation never really get to a fluent or native speaker level in any language - to be native speaker level, one must learn over 10.000 base words (15.000+ words) with their pronunciation and must have an automatic mode in the new language, and to develop an automatic mode in a new language, one must see and hear each word multiple times, until each word can be automatically remembered, and if one hears 15.000+ words multiple times, one automatically learns the pronunciation of each word!
This is very similar to the English alphabet! Unless my hearing is bad lol
There are a lot of similarities.
Most of the letters in Danish are pronounced the same as in English, and some of them are pronounced like in German!
Thanks a lot!
I lost it at D example, that was a difficult sentence to hear and pronunce
You are fantastic teacher thank you so much .maximum danish can be learned very easily with your videos .i just love it
Tak!!! Would you consider doing a video where you show or explain how your tongue hits when you say each letter? My Amerikansk tongue is giving me a hard time with L, J, and Y.
And I'm sure all of the other letters too.
L is the same as in English, and J / Y are the same sound as the Y / I in English, a normal Y / I (ih) sound, in all Germanic languages - most Danish letters are pronounced just like in English, the ER sound is like the ER in the German word der, so it sounds like EH-UH (an R-controlled schwa sound at the end) and the Z is also pronounced like in German, so it’s a soft TS sound like the TS in the English word cats and the ZZ in pizza, the NG is pronounced just like in English / Dutch / Old Norse etc, like in the English words sing / ring / singing, in all Germanic languages, and the Ø is normally an EO sound, but it can be pronounced differently, depending on the word, so sometimes it sounds like A and sometimes like O and sometimes it sounds like U or EU or something like that, and E can sound like in Dutch words sometimes, for example, the E in alfabet is pronounced the same way it would be pronounced in Dutch, like alfabeyt, so an extra Y / I sound is included between the E sound and the T sound...
@@FrozenMermaid666 For me Y sounds clearly rounded, like German Ü or French U.
Yes, in Danish the y is usually pronounced ü / yu like in German and Hungarian etc, which is the same sound as the u in Norse / Icelandic / Swedish and French and sometimes Dutch and like the uu in Dutch - it’s a sound made of two sounds, that is, normal i sound + normal u sound said together fast in one sound, so it’s technically a diphthong type of sound!
But the j in Danish is a normal i sound like the y in English - so, in the first comment I was referring to the j in Danish, not to the y in Danish...
@@FrozenMermaid666 J - yes, it's a normal yod sound like in "yes".
Mange tak! Jeg kan godt lide denne video. it's quite helpful! 😃 Greetings from Brasil 🇧🇷🇩🇰
Meu deus, os brasileiros até aqui
@@congamonga7039 tem sempre que se cuidar, pode ter um brasileiro até embaixo da sua cama 😎😂
Pensando em começar, mas a primeira vista parece um bicho de sete cabeças essa pronúncia 🤯
@@Lilolyglot123 Espero que não, pq sou alemão
@@congamonga7039 2 Monate später hahahah wow
Great video, tusind tak!!
Hello,
What is the difference of pronounciation between "o" and " å " please ?
Thanks for your answer !
I love your pronounce its so funny thank you
No language is hard when you have mastered Czech language.
What about Arabic and Chinese?
Ever heard about Malayalam, even arabs are flabbergasted
@@muhyadindahir3188 Not everyone wants to live in islamist countries! sorry
Arabic and Chinese are category 9 / 10 languages, extremely difficult, with impossible scripts and characters, and impossible confusing pronunciation, while Czech is a category 5 or 6 language, a bit harder than Russian probably!
Danish is a category 1 language, just like English / Dutch / Norwegian / Swedish / Norn / German / Welsh / Breton / Cornish / Manx / Gallo / Catalan / Galician / Italian / French / Occitan / Latin / Esperanto / Spanish / Limburgish / Yola / Luxembourgish / Aranese / Guernsey etc and most other languages based on Dutch / Norwegian / Italian / French / German etc, super easy to read / spell / learn etc with easy pronunciation that’s either similar to English or German or is more neutral like in Spanish, and Old Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / Old English and Hungarian and Slovene and Finnish / Estonian are category 2 languages because of the spelling with more accents and umlauts, but the words themselves are super easy to memorize / remember and the pronunciation is also super easy, just like those of category 1 languages, and Irish / Scottish Gaelic are category 3 languages due to the spelling with many accents and vowels that can be a bit confusing at first, but they aren’t impossible, and the words are also easy to learn, because these languages have mostly pretty words, and one tends to remember the prettier and more distinctive words faster, so pretty languages such as all these gorgeous languages are naturally easy to learn and remember!
Thank you so much for such brilliant denish voice .....mange tak
Danish** just to correct not to be mean 😅
Helps me a lot, thank you 🙏🏽
😅 that's sounds lovely
Here we START A JOURNEY
🙏 Mange tak!!!
That "er" sound is so hard haha I'm a Filipino 😍😁
I am a Filipino too and I am having a hard time pronouncing the words. Goodluck to the both of us.
Same good luck to all of us
Same 😁😁😁
Nah, it’s super easy, like in the German word der - it’s basically an E sound + an R-controlled schwa sound at the end that’s a bit longer or an E sound + an R-controlled A sound, one can just try imitating what one hears until one gets it right, and then practice it many times!
In your opinion how long will it take me to learn danish at an intermediate level?
That depends on several factors, Sani. Your current level, your native language, how good you are at picking up languages in general, how hard you study, whether you see it as something fun or just a chore, what your motivation is, if you invest in materials, etc. If you’re really hardcore and check a lot of the right boxes, it’s possible to get to an intermediate level in around 6 months, but it could also be up to 2 years if the factors are not in your favor.
@@Danishmastery Thank you for your help.Danish is 4th language that I want to learn.I have learned Persian,Turkish and English.I hope i can handle it.
How did i end up here i have to go to work in 4 hours
I feel you 😂
Very cool video thank you!
The G - is it pronounced like the German D or the German G?
G - (ghee)
At the beginning of the word, it’s like the G in the German word gehen and like the G in the English word go, and sometimes G can be pronounced like a J / Y / I sound when it’s in the middle of the word, like the J in the German word ja or the Y in the English word yes!
I love your video😂😂😂
Wait so is D and G pronounced the same?
No, they’re pronounced differently.
G -( ghee)
Sort of like hungarian "gy"? This one's the most confusing for me
In the middle of the words, the D and the G are usually silent, and sometimes the G in the middle of the word can be pronounced like a J / Y / I sound, like in the German word ja or the English word yes, and in the beginning of the word they are usually pronounced like a normal G and a normal D sound, like in the English words go and dragon!
😂 thabk for this hilarious & helpful video
oh hans is also a name in germany
Here are true multilingual nerds, since everybody in Danmark speaks English anyways
Just because everyone speaks English, doesn’t mean one should stay monolingual, pfff - all other Germanic languages are so gorgeous, just like English, so I am learning them all!
Meaning of these sentences so funny 😂
That was the intention!
In your opinion how long will it take me to learn Danish at an intermediate level?
Sometimes the time to learn danish depends also of your native language.
For English speakers though?
@@PomegranatesWeather depends on to many things again
.. but danish is an germansk” language same familly as english. Should be esay for you.
@@pebayou.3380 cool thanks for you're reply ❤️🙏🏾😚
Everyone knows all of these letters can be silent lol
its fcking crazy. i cant understand why forget to say some caracter in this language :D And change some caracter. for example. they say: God dag! But what you hear? Good Day :D not easy.
But "E" sounds the same as "I"!!
In Danish, i can be pronounced like an y sound or like an e sound, depending on the word!
Some words are same in Icelandic
mange tak!
R u danish or just good at it (I’m danish/jeg er dansker)
Jeg er selvfølgelig dansker
@@Danishmastery tænkte det nok!
tak for hjaelp 😁
mange tak!!!
Oh. Hear no difference between e-i, y-ø, o-å, a-æ ... :(
O & Å are the same sound basically, but sometimes O can also be pronounced like in English (with an extra U sound at the end) in certain words, and A is usually pronounced EI / EY like in English, and Æ / æ in Danish is more like an E sound, so just E without the Y / I sound, but this might depend on the word, and E can be pronounced like a normal E sound or like EY, like in alfabet (alfabeyt) which sounds just like it would be pronounced in Dutch, and I / i can sound like an E sound and also like a normal I / Y sound, depending on the word!
@@FrozenMermaid666 thanks for the explanation
mange tak
Parece o ednaldo pereira
❤
So funny 😆
I can't make the r sound I don't understand
It has to come from down in the throat, push it up and out rather than use the front of your mouth. Start by saying "air" and then making it more forceful. Hope that helps.
@@sarahlyon8664 thanks
@@sarahlyon8664 hey, it's more like french R or Dutch R?
@@xtraordinaryhombre I don't know so much about Dutch or French but I think it is closer to the French "r". It sounds very similar to German pronunciation too.
I am a native English speaker 🇦🇺 so it took me a while to figure out too.
Haj
Mange tak🤗
Mange tak 🙏🌹
tusind tak :))
Mange tak
magne tak
Hum er god
Lmfao this video is hilarious
hololololololololololo
Æ Ø Å Ö
999 Tak Thomi
Takkkkk
Aben Spiser Nu
So funny 😂😂😂
Kindly define to pronounce 'E' and' I'
🙏🌹💐
Downvote
That’s funny.
You are very annoying while making sounds as example. Could be in different way.
Cool
not a problem for me, I love the way he sound
The way is very funny.
I'm sorry guys but this language is not enjoyable and I won't spend a minute learning it 😅
Damn shame!
Thats pretty rude
It happens.
It’s a gorgeous language that’s like a mix of English + German pronunciation rules, it’s very enjoyable, especially the R sounds and the EY / EI sounds (just like in Dutch) and the many E sounds, super pretty!
Mange tak