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.
Danish is spoken primarily in Denmark and is one of the official languages of the country. It is also spoken in the Faroe Islands and Greenland.
Danish.
Icelandic. It's a North Germanic language, similar to the languages spoken in other Scandanavian countries. English is also widely spoken, and Danish is often understood. Students must study both in school as well.
Danes, Greenlanders and Faroese people (People from the Faeroe Islands). Only Danes speak it as their primary language. Norwegians speak a Norwegianised version of Danish when they speak 'Bokmål' which is the most commonly spoken version of the Norwegian language.
Swedish is the most spoken. Danish Norwegian. Icelandic Jamtlandic Faroese
Dansk is the Danish language. It is spoken in Denmark and is one of the official languages of the country.
Danish is the official language of Denmark.
Languages spoken in the Scandinavian region include: Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and English.
Everywhere, but they do know English as well.
Well, it is the official language of Denmark, Greenland, Iceland. It is also a minority language in the northern part of Germany. Though the Danish language holds no official status in the US, Canada and Argentina it is spoken by significant populations of immigrant Danes
Now: Norwegian. In the past: Old Norwegian. Under Danish rule, priests and public officials spoke Danish.