Languages of Denmark
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Languages of Denmark | |
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Official language(s) | Danish (>90%) |
Minority language(s) | (Officially recognised) German Faroese Greenlandic Norwegian |
Main foreign language(s) | English (86%) German (58%) French (12%) |
Sign language(s) | Danish Sign Language |
Common keyboard layout(s) |
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Source | ebs_243_en.pdf (europa.eu) |
The Kingdom of Denmark has only one official language, Danish, the national language of the Danish people, but there are several minority languages spoken through the territory. These include German, Faroese, and Greenlandic. A large majority of Danes also speak English as a second language.
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[edit] Official Minority languages
[edit] German
German is an official minority language in South Jutland County (in Region Syddanmark), which was part of Imperial Germany prior the Treaty of Versailles. Between 15,000 and 20,000 Ethnic Germans live in South Jutland, of whom roughly 8,000 use either the standard German or the Schleswigsch variety of Low Saxon in daily communications. Shleswigisch is highly divergent from Standard German and can be quite difficult to understand by Standard German speakers. Outside of South Jutland, the members of St. Peter's Church in Copenhagen use German in their Church, its website, and the school that it runs.[1]
[edit] Faroese
Faroese, a North Germanic language like Danish, is the primary language of the Faroe Islands, a self-governing territory of the Kingdom. It is also spoken by some Faroese immigrants to mainland Denmark.
[edit] Greenlandic
Greenlandic is the main language of the 54,000 Inuit living in Greenland, which is, like the Faroes, a self-governing territory of Denmark. Roughly 7,000 people speak Greenlandic on the Danish mainland.
[edit] Unofficial languages
[edit] Bornholmsk
The dialect of Bornholmsk is spoken on the island of Bornholm. It shares many features with Swedish, and can be considered a sub-dialect of the Scanian language.
[edit] References
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