A1

Basic Word Order

Ordstilling

Basic Word Order in Danish

Overview

Basic word order (ordstilling) in Danish follows the V2 (verb-second) rule, which is the single most important structural rule in Danish grammar. In every main clause statement, the finite verb must be the second element. This is similar to German and Dutch but different from English, which generally keeps the subject first.

Danish uses V2 word order: verb is always second in statements. Subject-verb inversion when another element starts the sentence. The V2 rule means that when an element other than the subject starts the sentence, the subject and verb must switch positions (inversion). For example: Jeg spiser morgenmad (I eat breakfast) but I dag spiser jeg morgenmad (Today eat I breakfast). The verb spiser stays in second position regardless.

Understanding V2 order is critical at the A1 level because it affects every sentence you produce. Once you internalize this pattern, many other aspects of Danish grammar, including question formation and subordinate clauses, will make much more sense.

Formation

V2 rule: verb always in second position

Position 1 Position 2 (VERB) Rest
Jeg spiser morgenmad.
I dag spiser jeg morgenmad.
Nu kommer bussen.
Her bor jeg.

Subject-first order (most common)

The standard order is Subject - Verb - Object (SVO):

Subject Verb Object/Rest
Jeg taler dansk.
Hun laeser en bog.
Vi bor i Odense.
De spiser aftensmad.

Inversion after fronted elements

When something other than the subject starts the sentence, the subject moves after the verb:

Fronted element Verb Subject Rest
I dag rejser vi til Berlin.
I morgen kommer hun hjem.
Nu gar jeg.
Her taler man dansk.

Main clause structure

The full main clause structure in Danish is:

Fundament (pos. 1) + Verb (pos. 2) + Subject (if not in pos. 1) + Adverb + Object + Rest

Examples in Context

Danish English Note
Jeg spiser morgenmad. I eat breakfast. Standard SVO order
I dag spiser jeg morgenmad. Today I eat breakfast. Fronted adverb, inversion
Nu kommer bussen. Now the bus is coming. Fronted adverb, inversion
Her bor jeg. Here I live. Fronted place adverb
Peter læser en bog. Peter reads a book. Subject first
Hver dag drikker han kaffe. Every day he drinks coffee. Fronted time expression
Bogen læser hun nu. The book she reads now. Fronted object for emphasis
I morgen rejser vi. Tomorrow we travel. Fronted time expression
Om aftenen ser vi fjernsyn. In the evening we watch TV. Fronted prepositional phrase
Derefter gik de hjem. After that they went home. Fronted adverb

Common Mistakes

Placing the verb in third position

  • Wrong: I dag jeg spiser morgenmad.
  • Right: I dag spiser jeg morgenmad.
  • Why: The V2 rule requires the verb in second position. When an adverb or other element starts the sentence, the subject must move after the verb.

Not inverting after a fronted element

  • Wrong: Nu bussen kommer.
  • Right: Nu kommer bussen.
  • Why: When nu occupies position 1, the verb must be in position 2, followed by the subject.

Using English SVO order with time expressions

  • Wrong: I morgen vi rejser til Berlin.
  • Right: I morgen rejser vi til Berlin.
  • Why: English allows "Tomorrow we travel to Berlin" with no inversion. Danish requires the verb in second position after any fronted element.

Double subjects

  • Wrong: I dag jeg spiser jeg morgenmad.
  • Right: I dag spiser jeg morgenmad.
  • Why: The subject appears only once, either before or after the verb, never both.

Usage Notes

The V2 (verb-second) rule is perhaps the single most important word order rule in Danish. It means the finite verb must always be the second element in a main clause, no matter what comes first. This is a fundamental difference from English, where the subject nearly always comes first. Mastering V2 is essential for sounding natural in Danish and is the foundation for understanding more complex sentence structures.

Practice Tips

  • Practice with flashcards. Create cards with examples of basic word order on one side and their English translations on the other. Review daily until the patterns feel automatic.
  • Use basic word order in daily sentences. Try to create three new sentences each day using this grammar point. Write them in a notebook and review them weekly.
  • Listen for basic word order in Danish media. Even at the beginner level, try listening to simple Danish podcasts or children's shows and notice how native speakers use this pattern.

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