No, but the Danish language is one of the Germanic languages
Aside from German? Dutch, Frisian, English, Danish, Icelandic
It is a German word, and it is not "Goudentag" but "Gutentag". It means "Good evening" or "Hello".
no it is definitly not ( I am from Germany. but it sounds danish or swedish.
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.
English, German, Icelandic, Norwegian, Dutch, Afrikaans, Danish, Swedish, and others.
Not a danish word.It sound kinda German though.
Tysk
Aside from German? Dutch, Frisian, English, Danish, Icelandic
Luxembourgish Pennsylvania German Alemannic German Austro-Bavarian German Mócheno language Cimbrian language Hutterite German Yiddish Low Franconian Dutch and its dialects Afrikaans Low German West Low German East Low German Plautdietsch (Mennonite Low German) English Lowland Scots Yola (extinct) Icelandic Faroese Greenlandic Norse (extinct) Norn (extinct) Danish (Nowegian and Danish are the same language) Swedish Gutnish
the same as English, Danish has the same number symbols...
It is a German word, and it is not "Goudentag" but "Gutentag". It means "Good evening" or "Hello".
Nothing. It's German for birth.
It's pretty much danish
Schoenwald
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 it is definitly not ( I am from Germany. but it sounds danish or swedish.