No, Dutch is spoken in the Netherlands and Northern Belgium. Danish is spoken in Denmark.
No, Dutch and Danish are not the same. Dutch is spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Suriname, while Danish is spoken in Denmark. They belong to different language families - Dutch is a Germanic language, while Danish is a North Germanic language.
No, a Danish person is from Denmark, while a Dutch person is from the Netherlands. The two countries are different, and their languages, cultures, and histories are distinct.
Five Germanic languages are English, German, Dutch, Swedish, and Danish.
Languages in the Germanic language family include German, English, Dutch, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, and Icelandic, among others.
The word "walrus" comes from Dutch and Scandinavian languages. In Dutch, it is "walrus" and in Scandinavian languages, it is "hvalros" (Norwegian and Danish) or "hvalross" (Swedish).
Dutch is a language spoken primarily in the Netherlands, while Danish is spoken primarily in Denmark. German is a separate language spoken in Germany. Each of these languages has its own unique characteristics and is not interchangeable with the others.
Hungarians are Hungarian. Dutch people are from The Netherlands and Danish people are from Denmark.
No, a Danish person is from Denmark, while a Dutch person is from the Netherlands. The two countries are different, and their languages, cultures, and histories are distinct.
That word is NOT Danish - probably Dutch.
No, Dutch
Could be... But I think it is Dutch.
NO, those are two different countries! Citizens of Denmark are Danish and citizens of the Netherlands/Holland are Dutch! Its like USA and Canada (though the Dutch language and the Danish are different)
The Netherlands, like the country name of Holland, uses the proper adjective Dutch. The word Dutch can also be the plural collective noun for people in or from the Netherlands : the Dutch.The adjective is "Dutch," as in this sentence: "I love the people in The Netherlands, but I cannot bear the Dutch weather."Dutch is the adjective form, but it is also a proper noun used as the collective plural demonym, i.e the Dutch is synonymous with the Dutch people. There is no singular of the demonym noun in English.
No, they are two different nationalities
German, Dutch, Danish, it all depends on the spelling.
Niels Bohr was Danish. He was born in Copenhagen, Denmark.
the same as English, Danish has the same number symbols...
The Stout surname is primarily English, but also has Dutch roots.