How to approach learning Danish
Danish is classified as a Category I language by the FSI, meaning English speakers can expect to reach professional proficiency in around 600 to 750 hours of focused study. This estimate should anchor your planning: if you dedicate an hour daily, you're looking at roughly two years to solid intermediate ability, or eighteen months with more intensive effort. Breaking this into manageable phases—perhaps 150 hours for foundational communication, then building incrementally—makes the goal feel achievable rather than overwhelming.
Since Danish uses the familiar Latin alphabet, you can begin speaking and reading almost immediately without a writing system learning curve. This is a genuine advantage: prioritise listening and speaking from your first week rather than delaying conversation until you've mastered grammar. Danish belongs to the Germanic language family, closer to English than Romance languages, so you'll recognize vocabulary patterns and grammatical structures that will accelerate your progress.
Success depends on matching your habits to these realities. Consistent daily practice—even thirty minutes—outperforms sporadic intensive sessions because it maintains momentum and strengthens retention. Seek speaking opportunities early and often, whether through conversation partners, language exchange, or thinking aloud in Danish. Embrace mistakes as data. With realistic expectations and disciplined, social practice, you'll move steadily toward fluency.
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