Your American History Reference Guide!
- Danish pronunciation

HistoryMania Information Site on Danish pronunciation American History American History Search        American History Browse welcome to our free resource site for all enthusiasts!

Danish pronunciation


This is a guide to Danish pronunciation.

Letter(s) Sound (in IPA) Example(s)
a (closed)
a (open) [a]
e (closed) [e]
e (open) [ε]
eg, ej [ai] jeg (I) /jai/
i (closed) [i]
i (open) [e] or [ɪ]
o (closed) [o]
o (open) [ɔ]
u (closed) [u]
u (open) [ɔ]
y [y]
y (initial)[ø]
æ [æ]
æ (before r) [a]
ø[ø]
ø [œ]
å[ɔ]
c [s] (rare in Danish)
d [d] in initial position
d [ð] after a vowel
d Not pronounced before t or s, or after l, n, or r
g [g] in initial position
h [h] Not pronounced before v or j
j [j]
ng [ŋ]
r [ʁ]
r [a] at the end of a word
v [v]
v [ʊ] at the end of a word
w [v] (rare in Danish)
x [ks] (rare in Danish)
z [s] (rare in Danish)

Glottal stop

In Danish, the glottal stop is used after the stressed syllable of words if that syllable's vowel is short.

The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the
GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy
Search | Browse | Contact | Legal info