If you can only learn one category of words early in a new language, make it the question words. In Danish, the six basic interrogatives — what, who, where, when, why, how — unlock practically every conversation you will have in Denmark: asking directions, ordering food, paying for things, understanding signs, getting unstuck when you do not know a word.
The Six That Do Most of the Work
Every conversation in Danish eventually routes through one of these six. Memorize them as a single chunk, not one at a time — your brain stores them as a set, and you will reach for them as a set.
- What — for naming things, asking what something means, identifying objects.
- Who — for people, ownership ("whose"), introductions.
- Where — for navigation, locations, "where is the bathroom" — the single most useful question for any traveler.
- When — for times, dates, schedules, "when does the bus leave".
- Why — for reasons, but be careful: in many languages "why" can sound abrupt without softening words.
- How — for methods, prices ("how much"), quantities ("how many"), feelings ("how are you").
The Pattern That Speeds Up Learning
Most languages — including Danish — build questions by placing the question word at the start of a sentence, then keeping the rest in roughly normal word order. That means once you can form a simple statement, turning it into a question is mostly a matter of swapping the right word in front.
Pronunciation matters: stressing the wrong syllable in a question word can make it sound like a different word. Listen and mimic native speakers.
The Most Useful Question Phrases for Travelers
Beyond the bare words, three phrases will carry you through 80% of travel situations in Denmark:
- How much (does it cost)? — for shopping, taxis, market haggling. The phrase you will use most often.
- Where is...? — for finding bathrooms, train stations, restaurants, hotels.
- Do you speak English? — your conversational escape hatch when the conversation outruns your Danish.
Politeness Markers
In Danish, like in most languages, sticking a "please" or the equivalent of "excuse me" in front of a question dramatically changes how it is received. A bare "where bathroom" is functional but rude; "Excuse me, where is the bathroom, please" is functional and warm. Learn the politeness particles early — they cost nothing and earn you better treatment everywhere.
Look Up Danish Question Words Offline
The free English Danish Dictionary has every question word and example phrase you will need, with pronunciations — and it works without internet, so you can use it in the taxi or at the market.
Get the Dictionary AppQuestion words punch far above their weight. Master the Danish six and you have the keys to every conversation you will have in Denmark — from your first taxi ride to the last "where do I find...?" the day you fly home.
Quick reference: Danish essentials
Here are the must-know facts about Danish. Bookmark this section — it summarizes the language at a glance.
- Native name: Dansk
- Speakers: 6 million
- Language family: Germanic
- Writing system: Latin alphabet
- Tones: non-tonal
- Where it is spoken: Northern Europe
- Hello: Hej (hi)
- Thank you: Tak (tahk)
- Goodbye: Farvel (far-vel)
Common mistakes learners make with Danish
Three patterns trip up almost every beginner. Knowing them up front saves months of correcting bad habits.
- Studying without speaking out loud. Reading Danish silently builds passive recognition but not active production. Even five minutes a day of reading phrases aloud — alone, no audience needed — dramatically accelerates spoken fluency.
- Memorizing word lists in isolation. Danish words stick when you encounter them in real sentences. The English Danish Dictionary includes usage examples on every entry — that context matters.
- Avoiding native content too long. Beginners often wait until they "feel ready" to read or watch Danish material. Don't. Even when you understand 10%, exposure to real Danish rhythm builds intuition that drilled exercises cannot.
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to learn Danish?
For an English speaker, conversational Danish typically takes between 600 and 1100 hours of focused study, depending on how distantly related Danish is to English. Romance and Germanic languages sit at the lower end; Mandarin, Arabic, Japanese, and Korean sit at the upper end. Daily practice of 30 to 45 minutes brings most learners to A2 conversational level within 6 to 12 months.
Should I start with grammar or phrases?
Phrases first, grammar second. Danish feels less abstract once you can already say "hello," "thank you," and "where is the bathroom?" Once you have a working core of phrases, grammar rules become explanations for patterns you already use, rather than abstract rules to memorize cold.
Do I need an offline dictionary if I already use Google Translate?
An offline dictionary works without Wi-Fi (essential for travel and low-bandwidth situations), gives multiple definitions and example sentences per entry, and never sends your queries to a server. Google Translate is great for full sentences; for vocabulary lookups while reading or studying, a dedicated dictionary like the English Danish Dictionary is faster and more thorough.
Apps that pair well with Danish study
- English Danish Dictionary — free offline Danish ↔ English dictionary, the core tool for vocabulary lookup.
- Voice Recorder — record yourself speaking Danish phrases and replay to compare against native pronunciation.
- Turn Off Screen — keep distractions away during focused 30-minute study sprints.
If you study multiple languages, browse all 45 NDT Studio offline dictionaries — many learners stack two or three apps at once.