blöd und blød haben den gleichen ursprung. während es auf dänish "weich" bedeutet, hatte es im deutschen früher die bedeutung "schwach", verschob sich aber richtung "geistesschwach", eben blöd.
not even my university professor knows how to pronounce this, she had us believe it was pronounced like a retroflexed voiced "th". shameful. great to have a native speaker explain how it's really pronounced. (and a little personal victory as this was my personal intuition as well)
Danish sounds so nice! The way "ked" is pronounced sounds exactly like "kill" in Irish English, but I've read that the soft d isn't actually like an L despite sounding that way to English speakers, so it's interesting.
+John Ubal It is! It's a bit of a pity that Scandinavians in general speak such good English, it discourages me from learning their languages a bit, but I'd definitely like to try one someday
@@grantofat6438 to you. yes, they do, if you speak hiberno-english, which you probably don't. really not sure why you bothered commenting this 7 years after i did hahahah
Det lyder altså grangiveligt, som om du i oplæsningen af den nederste række siger [støð] og ikke [støˀð] eller [støðˀ], ligesom det også lyder som om, at du siger [køð], hvad det jo vitterligt også hedder - uden stød :)
haha, as a german speaker when i saw the title of this video i had a laugh... das blöde D ^^
warum nicht einfach das ganze auf Deutsch schreiben, "das blöde D" versteht eh keiner der kein Deutsch kann
Exactly what I thought^^ "The stupid D" :DD Which is indeed the most difficult sound in Danish, so....
blöd und blød haben den gleichen ursprung. während es auf dänish "weich" bedeutet, hatte es im deutschen früher die bedeutung "schwach", verschob sich aber richtung "geistesschwach", eben blöd.
maybe im danish but i still know what it mean tho... didnt realize t before this comment
not even my university professor knows how to pronounce this, she had us believe it was pronounced like a retroflexed voiced "th". shameful. great to have a native speaker explain how it's really pronounced. (and a little personal victory as this was my personal intuition as well)
jakob plz; which professor? Rawoens isn't a professor
Lennert De Backer
één pot nat jee
Virkelig nyttigt! Tak for det, Alan!
Thank you for this. I've been searching for a long time and this is the first video that explains the Danish "soft-D"
Tak fra Australien!
Danish sounds so nice! The way "ked" is pronounced sounds exactly like "kill" in Irish English, but I've read that the soft d isn't actually like an L despite sounding that way to English speakers, so it's interesting.
+SuperPatchy I second that. Danish has a very unique type of pronunciation and I truly enjoy it. Additionaly, its written form is very elegant.
+John Ubal It is! It's a bit of a pity that Scandinavians in general speak such good English, it discourages me from learning their languages a bit, but I'd definitely like to try one someday
Enjoy???????Enjoy???????
"ked" and "kill" sound nothing like each other.
@@grantofat6438 to you. yes, they do, if you speak hiberno-english, which you probably don't. really not sure why you bothered commenting this 7 years after i did hahahah
xiamu: that is exactly what I was about to put. You got there before me!
Hvorfår det har forkerte engel. undertekten ..??hvor er kedeligt??
If you add some subs, I'd really appreciate it...
Det lyder altså grangiveligt, som om du i oplæsningen af den nederste række siger [støð] og ikke [støˀð] eller [støðˀ], ligesom det også lyder som om, at du siger [køð], hvad det jo vitterligt også hedder - uden stød :)
Glad that I knew some Danish before seeing “bløde D”. Das blöde D means the stupid D in German.
Mange tak, det var så nyttigt. :)
Very useful videos! And you have great pronounciation! I understand everything you say, for a change:) Please keep viedos coming!
It’s so hard 🤯
I have lived in Denmark for 8 years and still can’t prounance the soft “D” 😖
Tak
Takkkkk!! very useful!
thank you for the video
Tak tak tusind tak
Mange Tusind gange Tak!!
The long DE only makes it sound more like L.
østdansk
I still don t understand how it is pronouced
Like, basically, a strange version of the "dark L".
Like "th" in "the".
Gade = ga-the
Gad = ga-th.
sometimes it sounds like an L and sometimes like an R
This means "that bloody d", doesn't it?
Asehpe No. It means soft D. Otherwise it would be "det blødende D"
Hi leæer den vedisk er sot jeg vel leæer kram di
Hold da op en god stemme!
looooooooooooooool du er dansk ikke?