Danish is the official language of the Kingdom of Denmark and belongs to the Indo-European-Germanic-North Germanic language family. It passes through the Kingdom of Denmark and its dependencies, the Faroe Islands and Greenland, and occasionally through parts of Germany, Norway and Sweden.
In addition to this country, neighboring states in northern Germany and other countries also have more than 400,000 users. Danish is the language of about 5.8 million residents in Denmark and two autonomous regions, the Faroe Islands and Greenland. It is also the official language of Greenland and Faroe Islands belonging to Denmark. Danish is one of Scandinavian languages. During the centuries when Denmark and Norway were the same country, Norwegian cities used a language closer to Danish. This language has been used until now; Sometimes people call this language "Danish-Norwegian".
Extended data:
In Danish, nouns have two grammatical features: generality and neutrality. Like German, nouns in ancient Danish have three personalities, namely masculine, neuter and feminine. In the modern language reform, feminine and masculine nouns are combined to form common nouns. The number of general nouns accounts for about 75% of the total number of nouns. In most cases, there is no rule about which personality nouns belong to, so we must memorize them by rote.
Writing rules:
Danish is written in Latin letters, but there are three special vowels at the end of the alphabet:? 、? 、? . These three letters are stipulated in the orthography that came into effect in 1948. Before that, "?" Change it to ae, "?" It was replaced by aa. In Denmark today, some ancient place names and names still use this ancient spelling. Modern Danish and modern Norwegian have exactly the same alphabet, but their pronunciations are quite different.
Reference: Baidu Encyclopedia-Danish
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-Denmark