minus-squareGreasecat@feddit.dktoAsklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do you have “the” or “a” in your language? What language is it?linkfedilinkarrow-up11·23 days agoYes. In danish either “en” or “et” goes in front of nouns like this: “en kat” and “et hus”. This is equal to “a cat” and “a house”. If it’s in specific, it goes at the end of the word instead like this: “katten” and “huset”. This is equal to “the cat” and “the house”. linkfedilink
minus-squareGreasecat@feddit.dktoEurope@feddit.org•NATO ally (Sweden) reveals mass act of unexplained sabotagelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up30arrow-down2·28 days agoWhy would they write “NATO ally” instead of “Sweden”? linkfedilink
minus-squareGreasecat@feddit.dktoWorld News@lemmy.world•Calls for boycotting US products spread in northern EuropelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up7·4 months agoSig Jolly til din cola. 🥤 linkfedilink
minus-squareGreasecat@feddit.dktoGaming@beehaw.org•Comfort games?linkfedilinkarrow-up1·2 years agoI can always go for a game of Age of Empires 2. That game takes me back to my childhood. linkfedilink
Yes. In danish either “en” or “et” goes in front of nouns like this: “en kat” and “et hus”. This is equal to “a cat” and “a house”.
If it’s in specific, it goes at the end of the word instead like this: “katten” and “huset”. This is equal to “the cat” and “the house”.