Hey everyone, I'm Jonas. |
Hej alle sammen, mit navn er Jonas. |
Welcome to the Danish Whiteboard Lessons. |
In this lesson, you'll learn how to give someone your phone number. |
Let's get started. |
Okay, let's look at the vocabulary. |
First we have nul, 0, nul, nul, en, et, 1, en, et, en, et. |
And to, 2, to, to, tre, 3, tre, tre, fire, 4, fire, fire. |
fem, 5, fem, fem, seks, 6, seks, seks, syv, 7, syv, syv, syv. |
otte, 8, otte, otte, ni, 9, ni, ni, and ti, 10, ti, ti, ti. |
elleve, 11, elleve, elleve, tolv, 12, tolv, tolv, tretten, 13, tretten, tretten. |
fjorten, 14, fjorten, fjorten, femten, 15, femten, femten. |
seksten, 16, seksten, seksten, sytten, 17, sytten, sytten, atten, 18, atten, atten. |
nitten, 19, nitten, nitten, and the last one here, tyve, 20, tyve, tyve. |
Going on, we get at enogtyve, 21, enogtyve, enogtyve, toogtyve, 22, toogtyve, toogtyve. |
And then we go up in the tens here. |
tredive, 30, tredive, tredive, fyrre, 40, fyrre, fyrre, halvtreds, 50, halvtreds, halvtreds. |
tres, 60, tres, tres, halvfjerds, 70, halvfjerds, halvfjerds |
firs, 80, firs, firs, halvems, 90, halvems, halvems. |
Let's look at the dialogue. |
When I read, I want you to pay attention to the phone number. |
Listen to the numbers and see how they are used in the dialogue. |
Hvad er dit telefonnummer? |
What is your phone number? |
Mit telefonnummer er 91-23-45-83 (enoghalvfems-treogtyve-femogfyrre-treogfirs). |
My phone number is 91-23-45-83. |
Now, let's look at the comprehension of today's vocabulary. |
Here we have hvad, hvad, hvad, what, and hvad is a general Danish question word and it's constructed by HV. |
HV is for all Danish question words, so hvad, what. |
Next is er, is, er, er. |
This is the standard to be verb in Danish. |
And then we have telefonnummer, phone number, telephonenummer, telephonenummer. |
This is the standard noun for phone number in Danish. |
And finally we have mit, my, mit, mit. |
Mit is a possessive noun of my in first person singular in Danish. |
Alright, so now we have the vocabulary and we also have the dialogue and we know the grammar of the dialogue. |
So, you may be noticed that something is a little bit different from English to Danish on how you say your phone number. |
So, basic is that Danish phone number are always eight digits. |
And the tricky part is you say them in pairs. |
So, you go two-two, two-two, two-two, and two-two. |
Alright, so how do we do this? |
So, here's the example. Let's look at it. |
enogtredive, femogfirs, seksogfyrre, syvogtyve. |
So, that's 31, 85, 46, 27. |
Alright, so did you hear the difference in there? |
So, when you do double digits in Danish, you actually turn around in them, right? |
So, for instance, the example could be the number 83. |
In Danish, we don't say 83, we say 3 and 80. |
So, that would go trei og firs, treogfirs. |
Alright, so again, the example would be enogtredive, femogfirs, seksogfyrre, syvogtyve. |
Okay, now, as a pure Danish beginner, you're definitely allowed to take it down a notch a little bit. |
So, you could do single digits. Let's try that. |
So, it goes trei, en, otte, fem, fire, seks, to, syv. |
That's pretty easy, right? |
But, again, the correct way to give your phone number would be enogtredive, femogfirs, seksogfyrre, syvogtyve. |
Alright, you definitely need to practice a little bit here for this one. |
So, here's another example, the last one, let's see if we can do that together, right? |
66, 15, 08, and 77. |
Alright, let's see if we can do the beginner version of that. |
So, only single digits for this one. |
You ready? Here we go. |
seks, seks, en, fem, nul, otte, syv, syv. |
Tricky? Maybe. Let's try the correct way where we do double digits for this one. |
seksogtres, femten, nul otte, syvoghalvfjerds |
Alright, there you go. |
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