Danish Keyboard Layout
Download Frontype Virtual Danish Keyboard
Frontype is a virtual on-screen keyboard for fast typing.
Tilføj et input sprog i Windows Vista
Du kan redigere dokumenter på flere sprog ved at ændre sproget (input sprog), hvor du skriver. Input sprog er inkluderet i Windows, men du er nødt til at tilføje dem til din liste over sprog, før du kan bruge dem.
1.
Åbn Internationale og sproglige indstillinger ved at klikke på knappen Start, klikke på Kontrolpanel, klikke på Klokkeslæt, sprog og region, og derefter klikke på Internationale og sproglige indstillinger.
2.
Klik på Keyboards og Sprog fanen, og klik derefter på Skift tastaturer.
3.
Under Installerede tjenester, skal du klikke på Tilføj.
4.
Dobbeltklik på det sprog, du ønsker at tilføje, skal du dobbeltklikke på teksten tjenester du vil tilføje, skal du vælge teksten tjenesteydelser muligheder, du vil tilføje, og klik derefter på OK.
Sådan tilføjes og aktiveres yderligere sprog i Windows XP
At installere et andet sprog og tastaturlayout i Windows XP ved at følge disse trin:
1. I Windows XP standard menuen Start, skal du klikke på Start, og klik derefter på Kontrolpanel. I Windows XP klassiske Start-menuen, skal du klikke på Start, klik på Indstillinger, og klik derefter på Kontrolpanel.
2. Dobbeltklik på Internationale og sproglige indstillinger.
3. Klik på Sprog under fanen, og klik derefter på Detaljer under “Text Services og Input sprog”.
4. Klik på Tilføj under “Installed Services”, og klik derefter på det sprog, du ønsker at tilføje og tastaturlayout, du vil bruge til dette sprog.
5. At konfigurere indstillingerne for værktøjslinjen Sprog, skal du klikke på værktøjslinjen Sprog under “Preferences”.
Danish language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Danish ( dansk (help·info); IPA: [d̥ænsɡ̊]) is one of the North Germanic languages (also called Scandinavian languages), a sub-group of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European languages. It is spoken by around 6 million people, mainly in Denmark; the language is also used by the 50,000 Danes in the northern parts of Schleswig-Holstein in Germany where it holds the status of minority language.[2] Danish also holds official status and is a mandatory subject in school in the Danish territories of Greenland and the Faroe Islands, which now enjoy limited autonomy. In Iceland and the Faroe Islands, Danish is taught as a compulsory foreign language in schools. There are also Danish language communities in Argentina, the U.S. and Canada.
Writing system
The oldest preserved examples of written Danish (from the Iron and Viking Ages) are in the Runic alphabet. The introduction of Christianity also brought the Latin alphabet to Denmark, and at the end of the High Middle Ages the Runes had more or less been replaced by the Latin letters.
As in Germany, the Fraktur types were still commonly used in the late 19th century (until 1875, Danish children were taught to read Fraktur letters in school), and most books were printed with Fraktur typesetting even in the beginning of the 20th century. Also as in German, nouns were capitalized until after World War II.
The modern Danish alphabet is similar to the English one, with three additional letters: æ, ø, and å, which come at the end of the alphabet, in that order. A spelling reform in 1948 introduced the letter å, already in use in Norwegian and Swedish, into the Danish alphabet to replace the letter aa; the old usage still occurs in some personal and geographical names and old documents (for example, the name of the city of Aalborg is spelled with Aa following a decision from the City Council in the 1970s). When representing the å sound, aa is treated just like å in alphabetical sorting, even though it looks like two letters. When the letters are not available (e.g., in URLs), they are replaced by ae (Æ, æ), oe (Ø, ø) or o, and aa (Å, å), respectively.
The same spelling reform changed the spelling of a few common words, such as the past tense vilde (would), kunde (could) and skulde (should), to their current forms of ville, kunne and skulle (making them identical to the infinitives in writing, as they are in speech), and did away with the practice of capitalising all nouns, which is still done in German. Modern Danish and Norwegian use the same alphabet, though spelling differs somewhat.
Alphabet
Vowels
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded unrounded rounded
Close
(high) i y u
Close-mid e ø o
Mid ə
Open-mid ɛ œ ɐ ɔ
Open
(low) (æ) (ɶ̞) a ɑ ɒ
Modern Standard Danish has 20 vowel phonemes. All but two of these vowels may be either long and short, with the exceptions being schwa and /ɐ/. The long and short realizations often differ in quality and there are several allophones that differ if they occur together with an /r/. For example, /ø/ is lowered when it occurs either before or after /r/ and /a/ is pronounced [æ] when it is long.
[edit]Consonants
Bilabial Labio-
dental Alveolar Alveolo-
palatal Palatal Velar Uvu-
pharyngeal Glottal
Plosives pʰ b̥ tˢ d̥ kʰ g̊
Nasals m n ŋ
Fricatives f s ɕ h
Approximants ʋ ð̞ j ʁ
Lateral
approximant l
/b, d, g/ are devoiced in all contexts. /ʋ, ð/ often have slight frication, but are usually pronounced as approximants. The distinction between /pʰ~b/, /tˢ~d/ and kʰ~g is only made in the beginning of a word or at the beginning of a stressed syllable. Hence lappe and labbe are rendered [lab̥ə]. The combination of /sj/ is realized as an alveolo-palatal fricative, [ɕ], making it possible to postulate a tentative /ɕ/-phoneme in Danish. /r/ can be described as “tautosyllabic”, meaning that it takes the form of either a phonetic consonant or vowel. At the beginning of a word or after a consonant, it is pronounced as a uvular fricative, [ʁ], but in most other positions it is either realised as a non-syllabic low central vowel, [ɐ̯] (which is almost identical to how /r/ is often pronounced in German) or simply coalesces with the preceding vowel. The phenomenon is also comparable to non-rhotic pronunciations of English.
Danish
dansk
Pronunciation: [d̥ænsɡ̊]
Spoken in:
Denmark,
Faroe Islands,
Iceland,
Greenland,
Germany (Schleswig-Holstein)
Total speakers: c. 6 million
Ranking: 102
Language family: Indo-European
Germanic
North Germanic
East Scandinavian
Danish
Official status
Official language in: Denmark
Greenland (until June 2009)
Faroe Islands
European Union
Nordic Council
Minority language:[1]
Germany
Regulated by: Dansk Sprognævn (“Danish Language Committee”)
Language codes
ISO 639-1: da
ISO 639-2: dan
ISO 639-3: dan

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