I very much am. Denmark is a free country and we have so many good things. free healthcare and school and i am lucky to be born here. I never said i wasnt happy with Denmark, but just because u love your country and ur language, dosent mean u love EVERY tiny bit of it
Hi. I'm learning danish only here on duolingo right now. For main basics is it enough? I know by itself it wont help a lot, but with other source, can duolingo be effective? I'm from Hungary, and i like german languages. After english end german it doesn't look that hard.. only pronunciation is a bit weird for me :) If you know something else, may you suggest me something?
Uhh! well Duolingo is definitly oke to learn the basics! thats for sure! I would for sure recommend to learn through songs! I've done that with Dutch and it helped me more than duolingo could ever and its gone much faster. I would recommend listening to "Popsi og Krelle" since they sing songs that you probably already know AND when u can start to sing along this will help A TON with the pronounciation! good luck!
I am learning Danish and Icelandic and Norse etc and all other Norse / Germanic / Celtic languages, and I am beginner level in Danish (and also in Gothic and Faroese) at the moment, but I can understand almost every new word I see because I am advanced level in Norwegian Bokmål and Icelandic and upper advanced level in Dutch and upper intermediate level in Norse etc, and these languages are real fun to learn and speak etc! By the way, I highly recommend learning Danish together with the other prettiest languages ever Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Welsh / Breton / Cornish as they are equally gorgeous and way too pretty not to know! I recommend focusing mostly on learning the words automatically from vocab videos and revising previously learnt words at least thirty times over a longer period of time and learning over thirty thousand base words in each target language, and memorizing and analyzing as many lyrics as one can, and always watching every video with subtitles in the target languages, and apps such as Duolingo can also be helpful, especially if one is a beginner, but, with languages such as Danish and German one must also practice accent and pronunciation a lot, as Danish and German have the accents that are the most difficult to imitate and the most complicated pronunciation of all Germanic languages!
@@FrozenMermaid666 where do you learn faroerese? I want to learn also but in hungary we have nothing for.do u have anything maybe from english german or danish?
I am learning Faroese mostly from song lyrics and Wkp and from the few videos that are teaching Faroese on yt, as there are some videos teaching Faroese pronunciation and prepositions and certain words, which can be seen by typing things like ‘Faroese pronunciation part 1’ and ‘Faroese lesson’ and ‘reading Faroese’ etc on yt, and, there is a Faroese dictionary on the Net, plus there is a translator (not G translate tho) that has Faroese tho it’s not always accurate, but if one is advanced level in Icelandic it is very easy to learn Faroese that way, because most words in Faroese are obvious cognates with the Icelandic words, so one won’t need individual translation for each Faroese word if one knows Icelandic, and, I am already advanced level in Icelandic and Norwegian and upper advanced level in Dutch and upper intermediate level in Norse etc, which helps a lot with learning Faroese, so now I can even understand most new Faroese words by just seeing the text, without individual translation, so I can learn many new words from song lyrics and from random text, and the Faroese grammar is more or less the same as in Icelandic and Norse, and it is kinda simplified even, so it’s very easy to understand how Faroese grammar works by just knowing the Icelandic grammar and Norse grammar, so even most of the prepositions are used the same way in Faroese - I recommend starting with Icelandic and Norse or just focusing more on Icelandic and Norse first (and I also recommend learning the Faroese pronunciation rules in the beginning and revising them multiple times) as knowing both Icelandic and Norse makes it easier for one to learn Faroese with minimal resources, because there are way less resources / vocab videos etc for learning Faroese than there are for learning Icelandic at the moment, especially on yt, and, there are also more dictionaries on the Net for learning Icelandic and Norse than there are for learning Faroese, but hopefully more videos are going to be made for learning Faroese in the near future, though one can still get to an upper intermediate level or even to an advanced level in Faroese by learning from the few videos and resources that are already on the Net / on yt, plus I can also explain most things about Faroese grammar and the meanings of most words that are cognates with the Icelandic word, so if one isn’t sure about something, one can ask, as I can teach those things in yt comments, and I can also teach the correct Norse pronunciation rules (that no one else has taught so far) and most of the Icelandic sounds and pronunciation rules and how their grammar works!
hej, jeg lærte latin, fordi far lærte det. Så begyndte jeg at lære irsk, fordi min bedstefar var flydende i irsk (jeg vil altid conitue at lære på irsk jeg foretrækker det). Så begyndte jeg at lære norsk, hollandsk og dansk, fordi der er tv-shows og dokumentarfilm på disse sprog. men i modsætning til irsk har jeg ikke til hensigt at tale på disse sprog hello i was learning latin because Dad taught it. Then i began to learn Irish because my grandfather was fluent in Irish (i will alway conitue to learn in Irish i prefer it). Then i began learning Norwegian dutch and danish because there are tv shows and documentaries in those languages. but unlike Irish i do not intend to speak in those languages
I am learning Danish and Icelandic and Norse etc and Welsh and Breton and Cornish and Manx and Irish and Scottish Gaelic all other Norse / Germanic / Celtic languages (all the ancient ones etc) and Latin and many others, and I am beginner level in Danish (and also in Gothic and Faroese) at the moment, but I can understand almost every new word I see because I am advanced level in Norwegian Bokmål and Icelandic and upper advanced level in Dutch and upper intermediate level in Norse etc, and these languages are real fun to learn and speak etc! By the way, I highly recommend learning Danish and Irish together with the other prettiest languages ever Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Welsh / Breton / Cornish as they are equally gorgeous and way too pretty not to know! I recommend focusing mostly on learning the words automatically from vocab videos and revising previously learnt words at least thirty times over a longer period of time and learning over thirty thousand base words in each target language, and memorizing and analyzing as many lyrics as one can, and always watching every video with subtitles in the target languages, and apps such as Duolingo can also be helpful, especially if one is a beginner, but, with languages such as Danish and German one must also practice accent and pronunciation a lot, as Danish and German have the accents that are the most difficult to imitate and the most complicated pronunciation of all Germanic languages!
You should make a video about learning Dutch :D
welllll, actually im already currently learning dutch in my spare time, but ill see if it can make it into a video! xD
how Can u speak english so much more Well than me, who’s danish, and a lot of other danish people; especially morten olsen; xd;
@allanbirk3171 English, at this point is the language I speak most. Therefore I see it as my mother language just as much as Danish is. 😅
Feel lucky to where you were born.
I very much am. Denmark is a free country and we have so many good things. free healthcare and school and i am lucky to be born here. I never said i wasnt happy with Denmark, but just because u love your country and ur language, dosent mean u love EVERY tiny bit of it
I enjoyed that
Hi. I'm learning danish only here on duolingo right now. For main basics is it enough? I know by itself it wont help a lot, but with other source, can duolingo be effective? I'm from Hungary, and i like german languages. After english end german it doesn't look that hard.. only pronunciation is a bit weird for me :) If you know something else, may you suggest me something?
Uhh! well Duolingo is definitly oke to learn the basics! thats for sure!
I would for sure recommend to learn through songs! I've done that with Dutch and it helped me more than duolingo could ever and its gone much faster. I would recommend listening to "Popsi og Krelle" since they sing songs that you probably already know AND when u can start to sing along this will help A TON with the pronounciation!
good luck!
I am learning Danish and Icelandic and Norse etc and all other Norse / Germanic / Celtic languages, and I am beginner level in Danish (and also in Gothic and Faroese) at the moment, but I can understand almost every new word I see because I am advanced level in Norwegian Bokmål and Icelandic and upper advanced level in Dutch and upper intermediate level in Norse etc, and these languages are real fun to learn and speak etc! By the way, I highly recommend learning Danish together with the other prettiest languages ever Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Welsh / Breton / Cornish as they are equally gorgeous and way too pretty not to know! I recommend focusing mostly on learning the words automatically from vocab videos and revising previously learnt words at least thirty times over a longer period of time and learning over thirty thousand base words in each target language, and memorizing and analyzing as many lyrics as one can, and always watching every video with subtitles in the target languages, and apps such as Duolingo can also be helpful, especially if one is a beginner, but, with languages such as Danish and German one must also practice accent and pronunciation a lot, as Danish and German have the accents that are the most difficult to imitate and the most complicated pronunciation of all Germanic languages!
@@FrozenMermaid666 where do you learn faroerese? I want to learn also but in hungary we have nothing for.do u have anything maybe from english german or danish?
I am learning Faroese mostly from song lyrics and Wkp and from the few videos that are teaching Faroese on yt, as there are some videos teaching Faroese pronunciation and prepositions and certain words, which can be seen by typing things like ‘Faroese pronunciation part 1’ and ‘Faroese lesson’ and ‘reading Faroese’ etc on yt, and, there is a Faroese dictionary on the Net, plus there is a translator (not G translate tho) that has Faroese tho it’s not always accurate, but if one is advanced level in Icelandic it is very easy to learn Faroese that way, because most words in Faroese are obvious cognates with the Icelandic words, so one won’t need individual translation for each Faroese word if one knows Icelandic, and, I am already advanced level in Icelandic and Norwegian and upper advanced level in Dutch and upper intermediate level in Norse etc, which helps a lot with learning Faroese, so now I can even understand most new Faroese words by just seeing the text, without individual translation, so I can learn many new words from song lyrics and from random text, and the Faroese grammar is more or less the same as in Icelandic and Norse, and it is kinda simplified even, so it’s very easy to understand how Faroese grammar works by just knowing the Icelandic grammar and Norse grammar, so even most of the prepositions are used the same way in Faroese - I recommend starting with Icelandic and Norse or just focusing more on Icelandic and Norse first (and I also recommend learning the Faroese pronunciation rules in the beginning and revising them multiple times) as knowing both Icelandic and Norse makes it easier for one to learn Faroese with minimal resources, because there are way less resources / vocab videos etc for learning Faroese than there are for learning Icelandic at the moment, especially on yt, and, there are also more dictionaries on the Net for learning Icelandic and Norse than there are for learning Faroese, but hopefully more videos are going to be made for learning Faroese in the near future, though one can still get to an upper intermediate level or even to an advanced level in Faroese by learning from the few videos and resources that are already on the Net / on yt, plus I can also explain most things about Faroese grammar and the meanings of most words that are cognates with the Icelandic word, so if one isn’t sure about something, one can ask, as I can teach those things in yt comments, and I can also teach the correct Norse pronunciation rules (that no one else has taught so far) and most of the Icelandic sounds and pronunciation rules and how their grammar works!
I Can speak english realy good but Im from Denmark
@@tommykroghabrahamsen1522 I see often that Danish people speak English very well!
hej, jeg lærte latin, fordi far lærte det. Så begyndte jeg at lære irsk, fordi min bedstefar var flydende i irsk (jeg vil altid conitue at lære på irsk jeg foretrækker det). Så begyndte jeg at lære norsk, hollandsk og dansk, fordi der er tv-shows og dokumentarfilm på disse sprog. men i modsætning til irsk har jeg ikke til hensigt at tale på disse sprog
hello i was learning latin because Dad taught it. Then i began to learn Irish because my grandfather was fluent in Irish (i will alway conitue to learn in Irish i prefer it). Then i began learning Norwegian dutch and danish because there are tv shows and documentaries in those languages. but unlike Irish i do not intend to speak in those languages
I am learning Danish and Icelandic and Norse etc and Welsh and Breton and Cornish and Manx and Irish and Scottish Gaelic all other Norse / Germanic / Celtic languages (all the ancient ones etc) and Latin and many others, and I am beginner level in Danish (and also in Gothic and Faroese) at the moment, but I can understand almost every new word I see because I am advanced level in Norwegian Bokmål and Icelandic and upper advanced level in Dutch and upper intermediate level in Norse etc, and these languages are real fun to learn and speak etc! By the way, I highly recommend learning Danish and Irish together with the other prettiest languages ever Norse / Gothic / Icelandic / Faroese / English / Dutch / Welsh / Breton / Cornish as they are equally gorgeous and way too pretty not to know! I recommend focusing mostly on learning the words automatically from vocab videos and revising previously learnt words at least thirty times over a longer period of time and learning over thirty thousand base words in each target language, and memorizing and analyzing as many lyrics as one can, and always watching every video with subtitles in the target languages, and apps such as Duolingo can also be helpful, especially if one is a beginner, but, with languages such as Danish and German one must also practice accent and pronunciation a lot, as Danish and German have the accents that are the most difficult to imitate and the most complicated pronunciation of all Germanic languages!