The 5 Stages of Learning Danish as a Foreigner (ft. Conrad Molden)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 26. 07. 2024
  • The 5 Stages of Learning Danish as a Foreigner
    #denmark #danish #danmark
    With Conrad Molden in the studio, we decided to have some fun and explain the five stages of learning Danish that every foreigner in Denmark goes through. Of course, this is all a bit satirical and fun, but we weave our real experiences throughout.
    Buried in all the laughs and parody are a lot of good tips about learning Danish and some humorous stories from our experiences. Of course, learning Danish isn't impossible, but it's definitely not easy for foreigners in Denmark.
    We discuss the false confidence that apps like DuoLingo give you, how Danes react to non-Danes trying to learn the language, and Conrad's method for avoiding Danish altogether.
    Thank you to @ConradMolden for contributing to this video and joining us on our podcast! Don't forget to watch the full episode out now on all podcast platforms!
    Listen to the What Are You Doing in Denmark podcast here: linktr.ee/robetrotting
    ✅ Follow the pod on instagram: / waydidpod
    All episodes: • Playlist
    ➡ WATCH NEXT: Why Danish Is Hard BUT Hilarious • Why Learning Danish is...
    🛒 SHOP our CPH Travel Guides: www.thatch.co/@robetrotting
    ⭐ CHEAPEST Way To Book CPH Attractions: bit.ly/3GRWfIg
    💳 BUY A Copenhagen Card (80+: attractions & transport): bit.ly/43JOdLt
    🚋 Buy Danish Train Tickets Online: www.publictransport.dk/
    💸 SEND MONEY INTERNATIONALLY? Get a FREE transfer up to 500 GBP with Wise: wi.se/robetrotting
    📺 VPN NEEDS: Try NordVPN Risk-Free for 30 days - nordvpn.com/robe
    👕 MERCH SHOP: robetrotting.myspreadshop.net/
    SOCIAL MEDIA:
    ✅ Follow us on Instagram: / robetrotting
    ✅ Like us on Facebook: / robetrotting
    ✅ Follow us on TikTok: / robetrotting
    ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn: / robetrotting
    For more information about expat life in Denmark and living in Copenhagen, check out our blogs:
    ✔️ Robe Trotting: robe-trotting.com and
    ✔️ Everything Copenhagen: everythingcopenhagen.com
    INQUIRIES: 📧 martin@bentertained.dk (Note: We do not offer private tours, immigration advice, or housing advice in Denmark and only have the time to respond to business/media inquiries)
    DISCLOSURE:
    This is NOT sponsored content, but if you purchase something after clicking on links we may earn a commission at no cost to you. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    JOIN OUR FACEBOOK GROUP FAMILY: / robetrotting
    🎥 Our Equipment:(Shop on Amazon? Support this channel, by buying through these affiliate links)
    Hohem iSteady SmartPhone Gimbal: amzn.to/35azgF7Rode SmartLav+ Mics: amzn.to/3zghnlTCanon EOS Rebel T7 DSLR Camera: amzn.to/358KvxUHama | Star 61 Camera Tripod: amzn.to/3wber8tMountdog Softbox Lighting Kit: amzn.to/3g6VfTEMountdog 18" Ring Light: amzn.to/3wh2pKE
    Chapters:
    intro 0:00 - 0:22
    stage 1 0:22 - 1:23
    stage 2 1:23 - 2:44
    stage 3 2:44 - 5:51
    stage 4 5:51 - 6:51
    stage 5 6:51 - 7:39
    bonus tips 10:16 - 12:31
  • Komedie

Komentáře • 124

  • @RobeTrotting
    @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +2

    🔥Listen to the full 2-part podcast episode with Conrad here ➡ linktr.ee/robetrotting
    or search What Are You Doing in Denmark wherever you stream your podcasts

  • @jaynorris3722
    @jaynorris3722 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Danish language, in my opinion, is such a beautiful sounding language. It's just wonderful. I could listen all day to it, I'd not understand a single word, but just listening is good and make me happy.

    • @williamjones4716
      @williamjones4716 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Traumatic brain injury, eh?

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci

      You would be totally amazed by how many very similar basic words we have in D compared with their English counterparts - even though you "poor" E speaking folks unfortunately can't hear it straight away typically, when they are being spoken quickly.
      There are also many grammatical similarities between our two languages, so all in all E is actually a fairly easy language to learn for Danes - and the other Scandinavians with their very similar languages - , since we as if by magic already "know" half of the basics of E in advance - like some sort of a mysteriously parallel world of a simplistic older English so to speak 😉
      Some examples:
      D Skal vi [ve] gå [go] ud [ooð] igen [ee-gain] nu [noo*] for at finde min [meen] fader [fað-er !], så (at) han kan se din [deen] fine [feen-e] nye [ne(w)-e] hund [hoon*]?
      E Shall ( OE sceal ! ) we go out again now (for) to find my father, so that he can see your / thine fine new dog / hound?
      D Hvad [vað] vil du ( orig. "thu" !) give dem først [first] fra os [us]?
      E What will you / thou give them first from us?
      D Jeg [yigh] kan se en åben [o-ben] dør [dur] i(n) [ee*] det [de'] lille hvide hus [hoos] under det [de'] høje [hoygh-e] birke-træ [ beer-ke - trai*].
      E I can see an open door in the little white house under the tall / "high" birch tree.
      D Vi kan sende alle {v}ore gode kager over til ham [hAm] i England næste [nest-e] sommer, så han kan have en god tid der [dair].
      We can send all our ( OE ure ! ) good cakes over to him in England next summer, so he can have a good time / "tide" there.
      ...
      And so on and on 😉

    • @michaelburggraf2822
      @michaelburggraf2822 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@Bjowolf2that's looking really amazing to me as a German. It's quite like an alternative route from German to English via Dutch. What appears to be obskure by looking at Dutch might become obvious by looking at Danish. Except for the parts of English derived from French or latin.

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 7 měsíci

      @@michaelburggraf2822 Yes, and there are also a lot of mutual or borrowed words with / from German - mainly from Low German - that are now typically just slightly distorted with respect to their spelling. It's typically the bigger non-Latin words ( umulig = unmöglich, forsvinde = verschwinden, overtage / "overtake" (take over) = übernehmen ( loan translation), overgive = übergeben, angribe = angreifen, undersøge = untersuchen, oversætte = übersetzen, overdrive = übertreiben, formidle = vermitteln etc. ).
      If you check out our public service TV DR, which has many programmes with selectable subtitles in Danish, you will probably be amazed by how much you are able to understand directly or guess without too much effort - and the grammar is even a lot simpler than that of German, a bit along the lines of that of English in many respects.

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 7 měsíci

      dr dk / DRTV

  • @ConradMolden
    @ConradMolden Před 10 měsíci +4

    👋 Thank you so much for having me! 🤩

  • @Bjowolf2
    @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci +19

    They are NOT laughing at you! - they are laughing WITH you in sympathy with all your efforts and understandable problems.
    Please don't give up just because of a grin and a smile from a Dane - sometimes you do actually say hilarious things or get similarly sounding words mixed up, but we really mean no harm by it 😊

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +6

      It's only "laughing with" if we're also laughing. If we're actually trying our best, it's immensely discouraging. I know it's different online than in real life where you can actually hear someone's tone and context, but it's why we won't do any videos in Danish tbh.

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci +5

      ​​@@RobeTrottingI am very sorry to hear that 😢
      Please don't let our stupid grins and "clever" remarks discourage you - I guess we are just assuming that you are in on it and able to see the funny side of it.
      We often screw up in English as well, especially since there are so many very tempting direct basic words for very similar basic words "translations", which often come out as sheer nonsense or having very different meanings in English 😂
      For instance "skrue op" [skroo-e up] ( to turn up something), which is unfortunately not the same thing as "screw up" 🙄😂

    • @mr.fisher3379
      @mr.fisher3379 Před 10 měsíci +12

      @@RobeTrotting it might be a culture clash - in Danish culture we root (and laugh) with the underdog. You've talked about this earlier about our sarcasm and irony, and this is also a part of a bit of tough love comedy. We surely will only like you more if you mess up. it's very anti American, (I love you guys, don't take it the wrong way) to laugh at someone's shortcomings, but it's a part of Danish culture to take pride in humility.
      We certainly do not do it to discourage you, even though it feels like that because you guys were brought up in a country were people mostly laughed at you to discourage you, not with you.
      This episode was great! Conrad is a good match for your energy, keep it up!

    • @Pchlster
      @Pchlster Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@RobeTrotting Sorry about that. We do sometimes laugh when someone messes up pronunciation, but it's generally not meant to be laughing at the person, more at what happened. I remember a "joke book" when I was a kid about our elected representatives, what they had said in English as opposed to what they had meant; a female minister standing on the podium and explaining that she's at the beginning of her period, when she should have said at the beginning of her term brings laughs, sure, but I don't think anyone thought less of her for a slip-up.
      And we know Danish is hard to learn. And we might joke at the absurdity at that to a foreigner without realizing it might come off as off-putting. The classic childrens "Får får får?" "Nej, får får lam" exchange is impenetrable to someone who doesn't know that those three "får" words are all different in that sentence, despite being spelled and pronounced exactly the same.
      If I happen to run into you guys some day, you'll get an "undskyld" from here.

    • @ninarudbeckmolberg2290
      @ninarudbeckmolberg2290 Před 10 měsíci +3

      agreed! sometimes we laugh to try to lighten up the situation and show foreigners not to worry too much about little pronunciation mistakes. But I can see why the effect could be the opposite.
      or if the word you said sounded like a dirty word... danes are very childish when it comes to naughty words... :)

  • @Purplefishish
    @Purplefishish Před 10 měsíci +21

    You guys are developing such a good dynamic. This was very funny

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +4

      Thank you so much! 😊 It's always a breeze with Conrad though, but the new format is really nice and we're enjoying creating videos and the podcast this way.

    • @dbussa81
      @dbussa81 Před 10 měsíci

      You guys are the best I am in Esbjerg would love meet up with guys for a coffee

  • @janlindtner305
    @janlindtner305 Před 10 měsíci +4

    A little tip, when you speak Danish, do it slowly, don't be in a hurry, savor the words and people won't ask so much "hvad siger du? sig det igen!"

  • @spyro257
    @spyro257 Před 10 měsíci +6

    i was born in Skagen, raised in Århus, live in Esbjerg, and been to København many times, but i cant understand people from Bornholm...

  • @sifrasmussen2315
    @sifrasmussen2315 Před 10 měsíci +8

    Do as Conrad says and mix it up, and then just say. We are practising for the Julekalender. Everyone loves the Julekalender.

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +7

      Yes 🙌🏼 it’s hard to be a nisseman

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Yez, we speak Danglish very vel her 😂

  • @thomasbarnes2275
    @thomasbarnes2275 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I had a German customer, a priest, who moved to Denmark just to learn to read the original language that Søren Kierkegaard wrote in. Respect! It always makes me think that I too should read Kierkegaard, now that I am Dane 🙂

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain Před 8 měsíci

      It is not that easy to read XD but there are some fun stuff you can use in conversations later ;)

  • @sole129
    @sole129 Před 10 měsíci +3

    All 3 of you guys are a bonus for the rest of us:)

  • @birterasmussen9479
    @birterasmussen9479 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Lidt sjovt, at I siger, at kun danskere kan høre de forskellige dialekter af det danske sprog - for lige efter peger I jo selv på nogle danske dialekter (sønderjysk og jysk fra Nordjylland).... Så der beviste I da, at I faktisk kan mere, end I selv tror! 👍
    Det er godt gået - bare hæng i, så kommer det 😊👍

    • @RS-fy9hb
      @RS-fy9hb Před 10 měsíci

      Jeg har selv haft skulle lære trykfordeling, og udtalelse af det danske sprog, idét jeg kommer fra Færøerne, og flyttede efter 9. klasse til en efterskole hvor jeg havde konstant kontakt med og brug af det danske sprog, og selv der tog det mig flere måneder at få ordentlig styr på det, således at det ikke var svært at snakke med folk længere, men jeg havde stadig en accent, og der var allerede med al den hjælp du overhovedet kan få med at lære selve sproget xD.
      Det er ikke umuligt, men så snart man begynder at trække sig tilbage fordi det bliver svært, er det op ad bakke med at lære udtalelsen. Men jeg kan dog forestille mig, at hovedstads området nok er lidt nemmere, fordi du ikke er i konstant kontakt med 10 lidt forskellige dialekter samtidig.
      Hvis man som udlænding tænker at lære dansk, skal man nok starte med ret så små mål, specielt når det kommer til udtalelse.

  • @domenico26752
    @domenico26752 Před 10 měsíci +4

    As a Sicilian I can assure you that it is pretty normal to be able to pinpoint the exact city from which someone comes from, if you are from a small country/region with a strong and ancient culture. In the northeastern part of Sicily you need to travel only 15 km to hear a change in accent, and moving 50 Km is already enough to have different words being used (example: Pitone becomes Pidone, when moving from Milazzo to Messina. Those two words are a variation of the calzone). I can tell you for sure this happens in Switzerland too. To be honest I am quite surprised this is not the case in England too.

    • @williamjones4716
      @williamjones4716 Před 10 měsíci +1

      It is the case of England, and there are still regional accents, of course everyone points to East London's Cockney accent, moreover the power of Liverpool pop music may have helped to blend regional accents a bit. My Vest Vendelbo Danish father-in-law, who could not speak English, said he could understand Gaelic Scots fishermen.

  • @Gert-DK
    @Gert-DK Před 10 měsíci +4

    I have noticed, that newcomers are best at Danish, when they talk about something they rally care of. Then the Danish word are flowing like "skidt fra en spædekalv".

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +2

      Yeah, I definitely did that and probably said things in a very awkward manner - like a very long string of simple words because my vocabulary was small 😂

  • @icelandicshtuff7750
    @icelandicshtuff7750 Před 10 měsíci +4

    I'm Irish and I learned Danish through online classes in about 2 and a half years - the best confidence boost I ever got was when I went into a computer shop on my first trip to Copenhagen and the guy spoke Danish back to me! I just passed PD3 in May/June btw. Love Conrad's shows and I must have seen all Mike and Derek's videos, cheers guys

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain Před 8 měsíci

      must have felt good :)
      I mostly speak danish to foraners if I feel they will understand it or if I know it is the only language we both can understand. Middle easterns often only do danish, which is also why they pick it up so well :)

  • @cashonly8385
    @cashonly8385 Před 2 měsíci

    I leave for Copenhagen in 2 days. Back in January I picked up Duo Lingo to start learning Danish. I spent about 2 months with it. I got the section where I learned “Taler du Engelsk?” And found acceptance. Thank you, your videos have been good for preparing for Copenhagen!

  • @muhest
    @muhest Před 10 měsíci +8

    One of the sadder things about grown ups learning a new/other language is the shame. We are so aware *not* to make mistakes and make fools of ourselves, that we often times, don’t even try.
    I’ve said it before, and will say it again. If you move to another country … get your firstjob to be among small children. I’m talking about children who are themselves learning to speak. They have absolutely no hidden agendas in correcting you if you misspoke. Because in a childs world: That’s not the name for it!
    Whereas an adults world is: That’s not the name for it (idiot).

    • @williamjones4716
      @williamjones4716 Před 10 měsíci

      Well said.

    • @celeluwhen
      @celeluwhen Před 10 měsíci +2

      Yes! And often children will speak about things that are painfully obvious, and extremely useful if you're learning. Yes, please go on for 15 more minutes about the contents of your sandwich, I'm taking notes over here!

  • @ThomasVSGyldborg
    @ThomasVSGyldborg Před 10 měsíci +5

    My parents have an american friend who actually speaks danish, so whenever anybody talks with her it starts in Danish, but somehow during every conversation it switches to English and you never notice when it happened. Suddenly you just realize that you are speaking english for no reason what so ever.

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +1

      I'm guessing it's because she has some sort of accented Danish, but I don't know. Maybe she's just using Conrad's trick though LOL

  • @williamjones4716
    @williamjones4716 Před 10 měsíci +3

    You might try reading Danish newspapers and magazines in adjunct to your language class. My AOF and FOF language classes in Hjørring were crap, but reading the in-law's daily JP and weekly gossip magazines added immeasurably to my vocabulary. Had you a Danish farmwife mother-in-law, the opportunity to discuss sensational lille land crime stories is an opportunity not to be missed. 🤣 Under the circumstances we'll leave out the added benefit of reading Miss Solskin captions.

  • @mobomouse
    @mobomouse Před 10 měsíci +8

    I first thought that you were mobbing poor Conrad with the “røde” label on the mic stand, but later I discovered that all of them have the label 😂
    Keep up the good work. Great to hear about your experiences in DK with a twist 😊

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +5

      🤣😂 Oh yes, they’re an Australian company that makes microphones but the founder liked the way an Ø looked instead of an O 🙈 cultural appropriation haha. It is fun to pronounce Conrad’s name with a soft D though.

    • @saalllmmmmaaaa
      @saalllmmmmaaaa Před 4 měsíci +1

      Is mobbing bullying in danish? Cuz mobbing is also german haha :)

  • @whitelucifax6700
    @whitelucifax6700 Před 10 měsíci +3

    First of all, we have the oldest flag, I doubt you're gonna outwait our language.
    Second, I don't know a whole lot about learning languages, but I have heard that if you want to get used to thinking in a certain language, you gotta make everything you can into that language, sounds, texts, etc.
    I'd suggest you try out reading some books, translate what you need when you come to them, and later on it might be easier to read. If you want to, I'd suggest "Den Store Djævlekrig", great book series.

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci

      It’s not the oldest flag, flags existed long before 1219 😉

    • @whitelucifax6700
      @whitelucifax6700 Před 10 měsíci

      "Denmark's national flag
      Denmark's national flag is the world's oldest and longest-running flag. In 1625, the current design of a white Scandinavian cross on a red background was established, and the square shape was adopted in 1748. The 'Dannebrog' or 'Danish cloth' is how it's known in Denmark.. " ^^@@RobeTrotting

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@whitelucifax6700 oldest national flag that's been in continuous use is different than your original statement that it's "the oldest flag". Flags were used long before the Dannebrog - even current national flags that had have not been in continuous use, like the Japanese flag.

  • @ebbhead20
    @ebbhead20 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Dereks pronunciation of ØL was tier ten. Cant fault it Derek. 😊

  • @hw-art
    @hw-art Před 10 měsíci +1

    LOLOL!!! You just described the trials and tribulations of learning a new language very accurately. And the reactions you face are both a hindrance and a motivating factor. I met this woman in Maine who doubled over when I accidentally said "gunslasses" instead of "sunglasses" - and we still laugh about it. :-D

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain Před 8 měsíci +1

      most have been a fun moment :D sometimes laughing takes out the tension and lets you realized it is not dangerous to make mistakes, which then becomes the best time to try to speak more

  • @HXTz0
    @HXTz0 Před 10 měsíci +3

    The advice I've been given is: Learn the accent first, otherwise your brain won't be playing the music.
    Speaking Spanish, Danish, English, and German, and having lived in Germany for a long time I still find German the most difficult and I think it comes down the accent mixing too much with Danish so I end up mixing Danish grammar into it more often, which is horrific to Germans!

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +2

      On summer holiday in Spain we were mixing danish and Spanish words and just confusing everyone we talked to 😂

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci

      @@RobeTrotting Danish / Spanish - big deal 😂

    • @Bjowolf2
      @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci

      It's amazing that ze Germans are able to communicate at all with zeire notorious grammar 😂

  • @Summer_and_Rain
    @Summer_and_Rain Před 8 měsíci +1

    My tip to learning any language, is to watch a shit ton of movies, series in that language. Because as time goes on you realize you need to say word in a specific way, by saying it and knowing "this is not right, let me try again".
    It seems that english speakers are struggeling to say endings in danish, which makes it almost impossible to know what you are saying. ending -"e" is REALLY importen, it does not go away like french -"e"s does. An example is the name: Jane. It is said very differently in danish then english, and if you do not end with the -e, it will become a different name: Jan. A lot of ending -"e"s use the same sound as the ending on "Jane". But even saying all this, It is freaking hard to learn a language.

  • @ninirossau2304
    @ninirossau2304 Před 10 měsíci +4

    as a dane I am sorry. I am your problem. I am too damm lazy to try to understand what you are saying and switch to danish straight away. but when I am traveling alone I always find it difficult when I take the plane back home. I have to switch back to danish. some people are better at languages. my sister speaks british and american. I just speak english. she also speaks german and some french and italian. the best I can do is understand a tiny bit german and tell them I dont speak it. but you should keep trying, you will feel better as you understand more. but I dont have a good ear. I cant tell where in Denmark people come from unless I have lived there myself.

  • @SuiGenerisAbbie
    @SuiGenerisAbbie Před 10 měsíci

    👍 I am enjoying reviewing your older videos from 2 years ago.
    Actually, I kind of miss your saying “Thank God, you’re here” at the start of each video. ❤

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +1

      Yeah, we scrapped it because some people took it as a literal religious statement 😂

    • @SuiGenerisAbbie
      @SuiGenerisAbbie Před 10 měsíci

      @@RobeTrotting 🤣🤣🤣. Damn are you serious???
      Too funny, that!

  • @RS-fy9hb
    @RS-fy9hb Před 10 měsíci +7

    Btw, speaking danish is supremely difficult xD. I grew up on Faroe Islands with mountains and mountains of danish entertainment media, books as well as being taught the language from third grade (maybe 2nd, I forgot), al throughout until you graduate, and even then, it took me a solid 3 to 4 months just to speak without TOO much of a noticeable accent, and I still, to this day, having lived in this country for almost 10 years, still get some sayings, or ordsprog wrong.
    And don't get me started on dialects xD. I live in Jylland, Viborg specifically, and if someone who speaks with too thick of an accent, I literally can't understand half of what they say. I have to intently listen, pick up on the inflections of the words that I do understand to piece together how he feels about the words, before I can try and stitch together a sentence I can understand xD. If you live in the capital region, this is a problem you're not particularly likely to run into, but if you move even just an hour to any direction in Jylland, you'll almost find that it's an entirely different language.
    I realize this comment is a little dystopian 😅, but the problems I specifically ran into, wasn't about being difficult to understand when speaking danish, but I struggled with assimilating my own accent into one that sounded something like a real danish accent, rather than an amalgation of all the languages I speak, and that process was really long, but I've met plenty of people whose danish I can perfectly understand, even if they have some type of accent, Eastern european being a typical example of that, sometimes french, but it does work. But removing the accent from the spoken language is extremely difficult xD.

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain Před 8 měsíci

      The media you listen to does a lot, when learning a language and maintaining it. I can barely remember any of the german I was tough in school, because it was the only place I heard german. I can understand Japanses pretty well just because of watching anime for years. English was the same. Now the issue becomes remembering the danish words for things, because almost all my time is spend in english or japanese (^^")

  • @pallew
    @pallew Před 10 měsíci

    Great video :)

  • @Bjowolf2
    @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci +2

    You can tell people from SW Sjælland by the way they pronounce certain vowels in a very dragged out and "quirky" way.
    For instance they will typically pronounce the word "æg" [aig] as [ai-ai-aiigg], as well as saying "ded" [deð] for "det" etc. 😂

    • @Summer_and_Rain
      @Summer_and_Rain Před 8 měsíci

      A jyde will use "træls" where others will use "irriterende" :) (træls/irriterende = means irritating)

  • @michelleheegaard
    @michelleheegaard Před 7 měsíci

    4:57 this was so f**cking funny 😂😂 100p. I always get surprised when i see the name of another '-styrelsen' that I have never heard of before

  • @esteb6544
    @esteb6544 Před 10 měsíci

    The Duolingo fake confidence is so real haha

  • @Gert-DK
    @Gert-DK Před 10 měsíci +13

    Conrad, hate to tell you, but the Danish language will not die out. It is a protected language in EU. Sorry to disappoint you 🙂

    • @drumstick74
      @drumstick74 Před 10 měsíci

      Prøv dog at ha' lidt humoristisk sans. Han mente det som en joke!

    • @Gert-DK
      @Gert-DK Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@drumstick74 Prøv dog at ha' lidt humoristisk sans. Det gjorde jeg også.

    • @drumstick74
      @drumstick74 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Gert-DK Sådan opfattede jeg det ikke. :)

    • @Gert-DK
      @Gert-DK Před 10 měsíci

      @@drumstick74 Indrømmet jeg kunne have brugt en smiley 🙄

  • @barabarakiss
    @barabarakiss Před 10 měsíci

    So relatable! As international itself in Denmark

  • @jaynorris3722
    @jaynorris3722 Před 10 měsíci

    I've been watching a show called "Sommerdahl Murders" on acorn channel. I don't understand a single word, but the places they film at are amazing. Maybe if I watch and rewatch and read subtitles I might get something from them.😁

  • @belindamartin2908
    @belindamartin2908 Před 10 měsíci +1

    The reason the guy in 7-eleven speaks englush to you could be that he doesnt speak danish. They talk english to me too and my danish is excelent 😂

  • @ekrajb
    @ekrajb Před 10 měsíci +5

    Hva' snakker I om, mand? Dansk er kafteddermame det bedste sprog i verden, Det da' pis' næm å forstå. 😉
    Røget ørred .. Bispens gips gebis .. Jeg plukker frugt med en brugt frugtplukker

  • @Lorentari
    @Lorentari Před 10 měsíci +1

    Conrad was nearly right - You can mix in English into the Danish.. But you'll have to go all in. Like "Really" always turns into "fucking" - "Det er en fucking good idea"

  • @jeremycline9542
    @jeremycline9542 Před 10 měsíci

    What stage is it when I realize at the very start I'll never be able to pronounce the soft -D- nor comprehend something called "stød"...but I'm gonna try anyway?

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +1

      That’s actually a part of all 5 stages 😂

  • @evilsteph451
    @evilsteph451 Před 4 měsíci

    Great video! Drinking usually helps the pronunciation :) and when in doubt, soften your consonants and speed up! You won't sound any worse

  • @BenjaminVestergaard
    @BenjaminVestergaard Před 10 měsíci +1

    One of my first mentors in my education was a British guy, had been in DK for perhaps 8 years, and he knew his Danish well enough to really speak fast when he delivered a shitfall to someone who effed up...
    I think his secret was that he didn't mind that people could clearly hear his English accent... he didn't waste time figuring out the difference between "om" and "hvis", he had the classic English accent.
    My experience is that many other English speakers try to obtain a perfect pronunciation today...
    Danes are quite familiar with the English accent, so the attempts to perfect the sound is actually more confusing to listen to. It's pretty much how you can get used to an Indian accent in English quite easily...
    Try listen to a Dane that's been to the US for ages, like Ole Henriksen, he does some of the classic English accent mistakes in rhythm and sound as well... and the general public will understand without trouble...
    Danes can anglify a name in a quarter of a second, if you dare to actually speak anglified Danish we can hear the letters you try to say much easier than if you try too hard.

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard Před 10 měsíci

      I work with a whole bunch of internationals. Overheard a colleague trying to explain that having a name is something you do, to an Australian.
      The poor Australian focused too much on pronunciation rather than understanding the concept.

    • @RS-fy9hb
      @RS-fy9hb Před 10 měsíci

      My own experience with learning danish pronounciation is also rather uninspiring xD. I grew up on Faroe Islands, and have been in direct contact with it for my entire life, and when I graduated from 9th grade, I transferred to an Efterskole. It literally took me 4 to 5 months, just to start sounding like a local, and I constantly kept making mistakes, and watching people trying to parse the broken accent was sometimes funny, and sometimes really fucking annoying xD. The written language is not that difficult, although sometimes there's a little too many exceptions to the rules, where I start to question the rules altogether, but it's manageable, but getting a local dialect correct, is nigh impossible, if you're not literally attempting it constantly all day. It took me months, and I already knew the language, and could spell the words better than essentially everyone else, because of the way we learn danish on Faroe Islands, yet getting the pronounciation, and rhythms / flow of the language was a constant struggle, and I still struggle with word choice and "ordsprog" xD. Danish is by no means easy to speak, and danes, even I, can instantly recognize an accent, to the point it's almost humorous :D.

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard Před 10 měsíci

      @@RS-fy9hb I've known a few Faroese through my life, their Danish has been really good, to the point where I couldn't tell exactly what part of the country their dialects belong... and I grew up in the middle of jutland and could usually identify whether people came from up north, out west or down south, and of course Aarhus.
      It's in general been very close to 'rigsdansk which is a Zealand dialect without the extra syllables they tend to add to one syllable words (like e-en, to-o, tre-e)

  • @pipkin5287
    @pipkin5287 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Am I the only one getting mild anxiety on their behalf when I hear that they've been deleting messages from e-boks? Omggg 😂😅

  • @holdermeddk
    @holdermeddk Před 10 měsíci +1

    The five stages of grief 🤩🤣

  • @Joliie
    @Joliie Před 10 měsíci

    Moin is also goodbye, good morning, what is up, how are you doing, want a beer, any reference to the current weather and hello

    • @williamjones4716
      @williamjones4716 Před 10 měsíci

      But you only hear it uttered around the Tysk grænse.

  • @laustpeternielsen-norman9569
    @laustpeternielsen-norman9569 Před 10 měsíci +1

    But conrads danish is good. We are not laughing at you but with you❤

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci +1

      Not if we aren’t laughing too. If we’re really trying our best, you’re laughing AT us and it’s really demoralizing.

  • @RS-fy9hb
    @RS-fy9hb Před 10 měsíci

    Btw, when you're being corrected on pronounciation, you might want to check what accent they're trying to teach you, because there's a lot of people who consider any other accent but their own, or the capital one just simply wrong. In which case, learning the language at all will become extremely hard, because other people out in the country will literally become unintelligible. I have a difficult enough time as it is getting used to people whose accents I haven't heard in a long time as it is, so if you're being taught only one dialect, you do run the risk of not understanding anyone outside the capital region.

  • @mortenjrgensen9138
    @mortenjrgensen9138 Před 10 měsíci

    who is that Conrad dude?? he is super funny!! but btw Danish is not that hard, the age of 3 i was speaking if fluid!! but maybe im a genius 🤣😅and im Swedish thanks for a great laugh guys 😂

    • @nicklasdantes2471
      @nicklasdantes2471 Před 10 měsíci

      Yes, the easiest way to learn Danish is to learn Swedish and then speak with a potato in your mouth

    • @RS-fy9hb
      @RS-fy9hb Před 10 měsíci

      Did you have a lot of contact with danish people growing up? Because in my own experience, getting the dialect and pronounciation correct in a sentence, so it doesn't sound like you're a foreigner, is supremely difficult. I grew up on Faroe Islands, and I've found it very difficult to actually assimilate the local accent for months on end when I first moved. And I've been in near constant contact with the language since childhood.

  • @SuiGenerisAbbie
    @SuiGenerisAbbie Před 10 měsíci +4

    Learning any foreign language is no mean feat.
    It is difficult!
    Guys, why not speak more Danish? Immerse yourself in your adopted country’s culture. It will never come to you. You have to go to it.
    Talking about how hard it is to speak Danish whilst speaking English is a bit counter-productive & counter intuitive.
    Practice really does make perfect.
    Please keep trying and insisting that people speak Danish to you.
    They will twig on. 😀
    Conrad’s pronunciation is impressive actually.

    • @barabarakiss
      @barabarakiss Před 10 měsíci

      Well, you have to take in mind about some life situations. You do not have a lot of time for learning. Kids, Jobs, Studies, trying to find danish friends, trying to not get crazy without your family here and on top of that maybe some other health problems or smth else. Life is so hectic and even though I try to do all those things which you mentioned, I am also left with deep sadness of ignorance or question: How long do you live here and why do you not speak danish???

    • @barabarakiss
      @barabarakiss Před 10 měsíci

      Btw, Conrad is a fake international😀 cuz he has practise at home- danish wife😤😤😤😾😀

    • @pipkin5287
      @pipkin5287 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@barabarakissI'm a Dane trying to learn Japanese with all of those life factors mixed in, whilst not actually living in Japan. I've been studying it for ten or so years now, and I couldn't pass the Japanese Language Profeciency Test on the lowest level, even if I tried. Am I giving up just because it's hard and people don't yet understand me? Of course not! I'm passionate about learning it, and, looking back, I definitely *have* gotten better.
      Please be patient and kind to yourself. It's not a race. You will get better if you actually put in the effort, and I'm sure that there are people out there who'll want to help you out.

    • @MaximDL1410
      @MaximDL1410 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@pipkin5287👏✊💪

  • @stagger5863
    @stagger5863 Před 10 měsíci

    This where very instructing, now do it in Danish 😄
    Nah JK English are fine but do it in Danish 😉
    *Edit* Funny that there are so meany Danish languages, you guys where talking about some of em, Fynsk, one of em try Sønderjysk, Bornholms are just 3 two of em, i as coming from Copenhagen, do understand Sønderjysk and Bornholms to some degree, but understand English much better

  • @Jonassoe
    @Jonassoe Před 4 měsíci

    I've been in a room full of Danes where everyone was speaking English because there was an exchange student in the room, but when the exchange student left people forgot to switch back to Danish and just carried on in English.

  • @Bjowolf2
    @Bjowolf2 Před 10 měsíci

    So why do Danes think that English is fairly or even very easy to learn then? - as if we already "know" half of the basics of E in advance 😉
    Surely you must be able to see the many deep similarities with English by now? 🤗

  • @williamjones4716
    @williamjones4716 Před 10 měsíci

    Latin died out? Conrad was obviously not Oxbridge material. Sic transit gloria mundi.

  • @24jh42
    @24jh42 Před 10 měsíci

    Frustrated foreigners being annoyed they can not "master" a language that the locals basically just copies from others. Why is it en or et. Why does the word end in en og et? Because that is how the others around you say it, and we are to lazy or indifferent asking why.

  • @jandamskier6510
    @jandamskier6510 Před 10 měsíci +2

    1. Hvorfor mon kan missionærerne fra Utah tale (ikke snakke) godt dansk? 2. Jeg ville gerne hjælpe de to københavnere, især mht udtale og betoning (jeg er pensioneret spansk- og engelsklærer) , men det går nok ikke, fordi det sikkert ville skulle foregå om aftenen = efter klokken seks.

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci

      Not too sure about missionaries - I know a lot of Danish mormons moved to Utah in the 1800s though.

    • @jandamskier6510
      @jandamskier6510 Před 10 měsíci

      @@RobeTrotting I am talking about the ones that are trying to make us convert to Mormonism

  • @plerpplerp5599
    @plerpplerp5599 Před 10 měsíci

    Danish sounds like Swedish after a stroke 😂

  • @SunkenCathedral
    @SunkenCathedral Před 10 měsíci

    I passionately threw myself into Danish studies, but after 5 years I still have nothing to show for it. When Danish people talk, I still can't understand a *single* word. It's not a case of 'I understand some bits, but not others'. No, I can't even make out the individual worlds - any of them. Even though I have a vocabulary of over 2000 Danish words, and have gotten through thousands of hours of classes. It still just sounds like 'blah blah blah blah blah'. On top of that, I have become fatigued from 5 years worth of sneering, mocking, bullying and sometimes complete dehumanization that I've faced from Danes because I struggle with the language. Taking it all into account, learning Danish has undoubtedly been the single biggest waste of time in which I've ever been invested. From thousands of hours of hard work, I've gained absolutely zero ability to converse in the language, and yet I've lost a great deal of dignity and mental wellness to the bullies and naysayers along the way. The whole experience of moving to Denmark was presented as an upbeat, positive and supportive thing, but the reality is just so so different.

    • @RobeTrotting
      @RobeTrotting  Před 10 měsíci

      Sorry you’ve been through all of that and it’s definitely relatable. The lack of grace you receive from not speaking perfectly is why I have little interest besides learning enough to pass necessary tests for residency when I’m eventually qualified.

  • @MK-vh9wz
    @MK-vh9wz Před 10 měsíci

    If you only, talk English every day, you will never learn the language. It's much easier than learn a new language, let the danes do that.😂

  • @dgh25
    @dgh25 Před 10 měsíci

    danish is no worse than english, you have just as many idiotic spellings that dont make sense. Just keep speaking it. You will learn.

    • @williamjones4716
      @williamjones4716 Před 10 měsíci

      However English by and large pronounces consonants owing to its relation to old Saxon.