Let's Learn Danish! discussion
Basics
>
Numbers in Danish
date
newest »


12 - tolv
13 - tretten
14 - fjorten (fyorten)
15 - femten
16 - seksten
17 - sytten (sue'ten)
18 - atten
19 - nitten
20 - tyve (tew've)

German is cool too! I'm going to learn that after French! :D

I think Danish and Dutch are similar. :D

And here's some fun stuff about numbers:
Danish uses a strange combination of vigesimal (20-based) and obsolete and archaic words for the 10s, except for the first four:
10 = ti
20 = tyve
30 = tredive
40 = fyrre
Okay, those make sense, but check this out:
50 = halvtreds
60 = tres
70 = halvfjerds
80 = firs
90 = halvfems
Those are the short versions, if you wanna be super formal, you'd add "-indstyve":
halvtredsindstyve = literally "half-third times twenty". Half-third is archaic for "two and a half", so 2.5 x 20 = 50. "Halvfjerde" = 4.5, so "halvfjerdsindstyve" = 3.5 x 20 = 70.
Same with "firs(indstyve)" = 4 x 20 = 80, etc.
1-en
2-to (toe)
3-tre (tray)
4-fire (fe'uh)
5-fem
6-seks
7-syv (sue)
8-otte (long 'o':odde)
9-ni (knee)
10-ti (tea)