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Danish English

Meaning Danish meaning

What does Danish mean?

danish

light sweet yeast-raised roll usually filled with fruits or cheese

Danish

of or relating to or characteristic of Denmark or the Danes or their language Danish furniture a Scandinavian language that is the official language of Denmark

Synonyms Danish synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Danish?

Danish English » English

Dane danish Danish pastry

danish English » English

danish pastry sweet roll Danish pastry Danish

Examples Danish examples

How do I use Danish in a sentence?

Simple sentences

I speak Danish, Italian, Portuguese very well.
Danish is recognised as a protected minority language in the German state of Schleswig-Holstein.
The Danish person tries to speak Italian at the beginning of the conversation.
Where is the Danish embassy?
Norwegian is similar to Swedish and Danish.
My dog has got a Danish passport.
A Danish zoo killed a baby giraffe and invited the public to watch the dissection.
Tom thinks that Danish is the most beautiful language in the world.
A 13-year-old boy has discovered a treasure which may have belonged to to the legendary Danish king Harald Bluetooth.
Greenland became Danish in 1814, and was fully integrated in the Danish state in 1953.
I ate a Danish.
If you meet an interpreter from Danish to Maltese, marry her immediately.
Emily is learning Danish, because she and her parents are going to Denmark this summer.
Norwegian, Swedish and Danish are mutually intelligible to a high degree.
I speak Danish, Swedish and English.
My mother was Norwegian, and my father was Danish. It was not till I was five that I learned that they spoke two separate languages.
I like Danish beer.

Movie subtitles

The English intertitles are translations from the original Danish ones.
Here, the three passports, see: Danish, a Swiss one, a Romanian.
After our Danish tour went to hell?
They're Danish.
The Polish, the French, the Norwegians, the Dutch, the Danish.
Danish butter, Von Luger's.
Or under the banner of Duke Wallenstein, the Danish king, or even His Imperial Majesty.
Go, captain, from me greet the danish king.
Doughnut, Danish?
Oh, lady, have I got for you a Danish!
If we could only afford it, Danish modern would be so perfect.
Perhaps a. little Danish pastry.
Leamas crosses Danish border on his own passport.
In 1859, a Swedish army lieutenant, Count Sixten Sparre. and a Danish tightrope walker, Elvira Madigan, alias Hedvig Jensen..
Wrong, Vienna! My mother was Danish, my father Polish, naturalized French.
Danish registry.
You are in the custody of the Royal Danish Ballet.
Danish Customs. Have you anything to declare?
Is she Danish? English?
Donut, Danish?
Lady, have I got for you a Danish!
Danish?
Serve the Danish.
Then we're going to replace this stuff with some Danish modern.
Danish.
Danish too?
Large forests provided the oak for the first Danish churches.
Paw comes from the West Indies and your father taught you Danish.
Prune Danish, quart of champagne.
How'd you like to buy me a bowl of onion soup and a cheese Danish?
The last time I came here, I was with a Danish girl.
I know he's a Danish filmmaker, but to me he is, above all, a great international filmmaker.
How he would appreciate A Danish goose!
Well, we've just come from the courtauld- and ralph smashed every exhibit but one, in the Danish contemporary sculpture exhibition.
Oh, well, of course he's Danish. - Yes.
You know Danish too?

News and current affairs

The Danish cartoonists and newspaper editors that published the cartoons obviously failed to understand that they were not just addressing themselves to a local audience but to other inhabitants of the global village.
Unfortunately they are the beneficiaries of the conflict that was triggered by the cartoons in a Danish newspaper.
Denmark's government has done just this and seems to be bringing the Danish public around to the idea of joining the euro.
This time Danish voters once again rejected the advice of their political establishment.
Danish political leaders failed to convince their constituencies that the Euro should be regarded as a positive element in the creation of a Europe whole and free.
This is why the result of the Danish referendum should be taken as a warning that great efforts must be made to convince Europe's citizens of the Euro's political importance - and of the importance of enlarging the Union.
The Dutch Freedom Party (whose only member is its leader, Geert Wilders), the Danish People's Party, led by Pia Kjaersgaard, and Jimmy Akesson's Sweden Democrats claim to be the defenders of Western civilization against its main enemy: Islam.
That is why the Danish model is probably the worst solution, for it requires no governing ability from the populists.
The Danish government almost collapsed in January when the Ministry of Labor proposed to open the job market to all new EU citizens who can prove that they have found employment.
A Danish law enacted in 1993 recognizes a right to work discontinuously, while also recognizing people's right to a continuous income.
Danish unions have managed to use such statutory individual rights to reduce the working hours of entire company workforces, and thus increase the number of permanent jobs.
Yet Danish politicians seem intent on choosing much more expensive solutions, implying a two-fold (or more) increase in cost.
The Danish Presidency will consistently put the common interest at the forefront.
The Danish case highlights the pivotal role of governance reform if Europe is ever to meet its Lisbon goals.
Nigeria has been convulsed by religious violence triggered by the cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad published in a Danish newspaper months ago.
Ominously, in a referendum this month, Danish voters, swayed by similar concerns about refugees and terrorism, rejected proposals for closer cross-border policing cooperation with the EU.
In 2005, when I was Prime Minister of Denmark, the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten provoked international controversy by publishing twelve sketches of the Prophet Muhammad.
There were calls for reprisals against the newspaper, against my government, and against Danish interests abroad.
Interestingly, the main Danish and British anti-European parties have refused to follow suit, refusing to enter into a pact with a party that was and probably remains anti-Semitic at its core.
In Denmark, the hard-right Danish People's Party, with 25 parliamentary seats, is the country's third largest party.
It supports that it was aimed at such things as the derogatory cartoons of the prophet Mohammad published in a Danish newspaper three years ago.
A good Danish or Bulgarian player improves much faster if he joins Manchester United or Barcelona.
All three countries may soon be following the Danish model, in which the illiberal populist parties pledge their support without actually governing, thereby gaining power without responsibility.

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