| Hey everyone, I'm Jonas. |
| Hej allesammen, jeg hedder Jonas. |
| Welcome to the Danish Whiteboard Lessons. |
| In this lesson you'll learn how to talk about your nationality. |
| Let's get started. |
| Okay, let's look at the vocabulary. |
| First we have Sydkoreaner, South Korean, Sydkoreaner, Sydkoreaner, Sydkoreaner. |
| Mexicaner, Mexican, Mexicaner, Mexicaner, Mexicaner. |
| Russer, Russian, Russer, Russer, Russer. |
| Next, Inder, Indian, Inder, Inder. |
| And, Tysker, German, Tysker, Tysker. |
| Franskmand, French, Franskmand, Franskmand, Franskmand. |
| Next, Japaner, Japanese, Japaner, Japaner, Japaner. |
| Brasilianer, Brazilian, Brasilianer, Brasilianer. |
| And, Egypter, Egyptian, Egypter, Egypter, Egypter. |
| Sydafrikaner, South African, Sydafrikaner, Sydafrikaner. |
| And, Hongkonger, Hongkongese, Hongkonger, Hongkonger, Hongkonger. |
| All right, Græker, Greek, Græker. |
| Israeler, Israeli, Israeler, Israeler. |
| And, Canadier, Canadian, Canadier, Canadier. |
| Nordmand, Norwegian, Nordmand, Nordmand, Nordmand. |
| Svensker, Swede, Svensker, Svensker, Svensker. |
| And, the last one, Dansker, Dane, Dansker, Dansker, Dansker. |
| Let's look at the dialogue. |
| When I read, I want you to pay attention to the nationality. |
| Find the nationality and see how it's used in the dialogue. |
| Here we go. |
| Er du dansker? Ja, jeg er dansker. |
| Er han svensker? Nej, han er ikke svensker. Han er nordmand. |
| All right, so the English version of this would be, Are you Danish? Yes, I'm Danish. |
| Is he Swedish? No, he's not Swedish. He's Norwegian. |
| Now, let's look at the sentence pattern. |
| The dialogues was basically structured from this, Er du… and then you put in the nationality meaning, Are you… and then nationality. |
| Now, let's look at some of the supplemental vocabulary that relates to this topic. |
| Here we go. |
| Ja, basically meaning yes. Ja, ja. |
| Nej. And that means no. Nej. Nej. |
| And then we have ikke. And that means not. That's a general negative denominator. Ikke. Ikke. |
| And then we have du. Meaning you. |
| That's the second person singular pronoun in Danish. Du. Du. |
| And then hen. That means he in Danish. Third person singular pronoun. Hen. Hen. |
| Other ones in the same category would be hun. Meaning she. Hun. Hun. |
| And the last one. |
| Den. Or det. Meaning it. |
| Den. Det. Den. Det. |
| Nationality in Danish typically has an -er added with a few regulars in there. |
| When we do languages on native tongues, we add -sk in the end, also with a few regulars. |
| So let's look at a couple of examples here. |
| So first one, En dansker taler dansk, meaning 'A Dane speaks Danish'. Next one, En tysker taler tysk, 'A German speaks German'. |
| Please notice when writing in Danish, only countries and places are written with capital letters. |
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