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Not a danish word.It sound kinda German though.
Tysk
Five Germanic languages are English, German, Dutch, Swedish, and Danish.
"Goudentag" is not a Danish or German word. It does not have a known meaning in either language. It might be misspelled or a made-up word.
Schoenwald
Nothing. It's German for birth.
It's pretty much danish
Danish, English at 3th grade, and German/French at 7-9th grade.
Apparently it means "guarantee" or "warranty" in Danish, according to Wikipedia. But in German it means "to borrow".
No, Spejcher is not a common German name. It does not appear to have German origins.
Like swedish, English or German.
Easier than German ;). The grammar can be problematic.