Why Are Danish Numbers So WEIRD?

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  • Опубликовано: 21 мар 2024
  • If you ever came across Danish numbers, you might have wondered what's up with some of them and why they sound so weird compared to other languages in the Northern Germanic family. There is actually a logic to them all. #danish #learndanish #scandinavia #northerneurope #languagelearning
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Комментарии • 39

  • @Aperazzo_Salsa_Pics
    @Aperazzo_Salsa_Pics 2 дня назад +1

    Would be fun to also add the Dutch numbers here. Sound highly similar too!

  • @irinaskuld
    @irinaskuld  2 месяца назад +3

    Enjoying my content? Hit subscribe for more!

  • @sheilanixon913
    @sheilanixon913 2 дня назад +1

    Cumbrian dialect, which is related to Danish and Norwegian has a system where shepherds count their sheep by counting in 4 sets of 5 , and then putting a stone in their pockets. . Yan tyan tethera methera dik yabadik, tyanadik , tethera,dik methera dik, bumpit sorry ,I forgot the rest.

  • @mikaelrundqvist2338
    @mikaelrundqvist2338 7 дней назад +2

    Bra uttal av svenska. Jag blev nyfiken hur väl danskar förstår oss svenskar med decimalsystemet eftersom det till och ned fanns ett förslag på att ersätta/komplettera med decimalsystemet.
    Vi kan byta morot till gulrot och rolig till skoj som väl funkar på både norska och danska även det väl är göj.

    • @ulrikschackmeyer848
      @ulrikschackmeyer848 7 дней назад +1

      Som dansker har jeg intet problem med at forstå svenske tal. De er jo logiske nok. Men jeg oplever at mange svenskere hellere vi slå over i engelsk, end at prøve at udtale danske tal mellem 50-99.
      Og vore tal er som regel også den letteste måde at afsløre en fremmed/udlænding, der ikke er vokset op i Danmark.

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  7 дней назад

      Jag tycker om båda två / jeg kan godt lide begge to 😊))
      Det är faktiskt mycket lättare för mig att tala svenska eftersom det är skandinaviska språket jag lärde mig mest, förutom detta undervisade jag svenka som främmande språk.
      Man måste anstränga sig litegrann för att kunna fatta danska, det gäller inte bara uttalet men ibland ordförrådet också.
      Jag vet inte om det stämmer, men för några år sedan lärde man sig ett skandinaviskt språk till på skolan så att man kunde använda det på aktivt sätt, men nu pratar alla engelska som det nyttigaste medlet för att undvika missföstånd.

  • @wild_insomnia
    @wild_insomnia 3 дня назад +1

    Lady,you nailed all these accents.Also,what language sounds worse-Swedish or Danish ?

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  3 дня назад +1

      Not really the person to ask since I love both languages :))) But since I am much more fluent in Swedish I'd say Danish poses some serious problems to an untrained ear.

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 12 дней назад +5

    That thing with half and a clock is present in Polish.

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  11 дней назад +2

      probablz in more languages than I am aware of :))) thx!

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 8 дней назад

      @@irinaskuld In Finnish too.

    • @MarkDDG
      @MarkDDG 8 дней назад +2

      ⁠@@irinaskuld In Dutch too

    • @tmhc72_gtg22c
      @tmhc72_gtg22c 8 дней назад +1

      This is even more complicated in some Germanic languages that refer to the half hour when saying minutes from 16 to 44 past the hour. For example the words for 2:25 will translate to English as "five before half three" and the words for 2:35 will translate to English as "five over half three".

    • @ulrikschackmeyer848
      @ulrikschackmeyer848 7 дней назад

      Ordinary, coloquial Danish too

  • @kildevang98
    @kildevang98 9 дней назад +2

    Also, even though halvtredje, halvfjerde, halvfemte and so on is not in use any more, halvanden (half away from the second, ie. 1½) is very much in use still. "Jeg er der om halvanden time"/"I am there (will arrive) in one and a half hour" is a very common phrase.

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  8 дней назад

      nesten samme på tysk - eineinhalb Stunden

    • @mikaelrundqvist2338
      @mikaelrundqvist2338 7 дней назад +1

      Och om man kan lite äldre uttryck i svenska så sa man t.ex. jag kommer om halvannan timma även i Sverige.

  • @mrab4222
    @mrab4222 4 дня назад +1

    5:15 Swiss French differs from French French: septante (70), huitante (80), nonante (90).

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  3 дня назад

      that I did not know. merci!

  • @carstenfunder
    @carstenfunder 4 дня назад +1

    As a Dane, I would like it changed to the English/Swedish/Norwegian system. The Danish way of counting is an unnecessary obstacle. It is counterintuitive and difficult to learn for foreigners and as well as for Danes with dyslexia.

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  4 дня назад

      ville det være kedeligt bagefter? jeg kan godt lide dem :))))

  • @excancerpoik
    @excancerpoik Месяц назад +4

    In Swedish it can be either en or ett depending on grammatical gender

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  Месяц назад +1

      i know, i was just referring to numerals, not articles (ett hus - en penna)

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 12 дней назад

      @@irinaskuld But number one can also be en or ett. Some prefer en, others ett, when counting (abstractly).

  • @nbell63
    @nbell63 2 месяца назад +6

    This reminds me of the remnants of the Babylonian system of 12s which we still use to separate/demarcate time. (takk 😊)

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  2 месяца назад +3

      oh yes totally! one of the few instances in IE based on 6/12. 🎉

    • @shruggzdastr8-facedclown
      @shruggzdastr8-facedclown Месяц назад +2

      Similarly, I find it interesting how so many of our numerical systems start out as dozenal counting systems but then abruptly change gears to decimal after the first set of twelve numbers are counted; yet, we don't bat an eye as to why we've retained/maintained this vestigial trace of foundational dozenal enumeration while not keeping it in place for the entire numerical system, thereafter
      Like, why (in English) do we say "eleven" and "twelve" instead of "one-teen" and "two-teen"? Why, in German/Deutsche, do they say "elf" and "zwölf" instead of "ein und zehn/einzehn" and "zwei und zehn/zweizehn"? And so on?

  • @konzack
    @konzack 9 дней назад +2

    Most Danes do not know this system, they jusr remember the words.

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  8 дней назад

      same with any other native or near-native language

  • @Lightbeerer
    @Lightbeerer 2 месяца назад +1

    We tell time the same way in Norwegian as well: halv to, halv tre, halv fire and so on. I don't know whether that is a borrowing from Danish or somewhere else. Of course, in British English they also say half two, half three etc, but then they mean half *past* two, half *past* three ...

    • @irinaskuld
      @irinaskuld  2 месяца назад +4

      It's common in all of Germanic, I just gave two eksempler 😊

    • @dannydetonator
      @dannydetonator 10 дней назад

      Not only Germanic, we say half-two ("pus-divi" in Latvian) meaning 1:30 in Baltic and some Slavic languages too, though it's not usually written as literary correct language. In Russian though you can say or write any number of minutes _before_ the hour with the correct conjugation of said hour, used more often than minutes _past_ the hour.

  • @irinaskuld
    @irinaskuld  2 месяца назад +2

    Anyone with knowledge of Faeroese? The numbers from 20 to 90 actually have double variants, the Danish-inspired one and the classical decimal one so I was curious which one is currently in use. I have a hunch the vigesimal is rather formal.

    • @weepingscorpion8739
      @weepingscorpion8739 16 дней назад +1

      Native Faroese here. The Danish system is WAY more common. The elder system was only mandatory on cheques which have not been legal tender since 2017. Some people still use the old system but as I say it's rare. Btw., thanks for including Faroese but "boo" for not trying to pronounce it! :P

    • @weepingscorpion8739
      @weepingscorpion8739 16 дней назад +1

      Oh, one more thing: The Danish system might be VERY young in Faroese. There is some evidence that the decimal system was used as late as the late 18th century. BUT then school became mandatory and for some reason, Danish became the language of learning even though we were in the time of romanticism and later nationalism and all that. It may have to do with post-colonialism on the Faroese part which made us feel like our language was low prestige etc., but that's pure speculation on my part. In any case, this led to the decimal system virtually doing out in Faroese but as mentioned it is not quite dead yet. - I am glad that you mentioned how to tell the time as a good way of learning the "new" number system, as afaik in Germanic languages English is the odd one out in not using it. It is also used in some Slavic languages like Czech and Slovak (the latter of which I also happen to speak). Again, great video.

  • @leosmith848
    @leosmith848 8 дней назад +1

    three scoe and ten. Five and twenty. Quatrre-vingt-dix