Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Danish grammar and vocabulary.
Questions & Answers about Jeg ser hunden løbe i haven.
Why is the dog in the definite form hunden instead of using en hund?
In Danish, the definite form is normally indicated by a suffix. You use hunden (meaning the dog) when referring to a specific dog that both the speaker and listener are presumably aware of. If you said en hund, that would mean a dog in a more general sense.
Why do we have the verb løbe here instead of løber?
When you use verbs after ser (or other verbs of perception, like hører, føler, etc.) in Danish, you usually keep them in the infinitive (the base form). So you say ser hunden løbe rather than ser hunden løber. It’s a special construction that shows you see the action taking place.
Does i haven mean in the garden?
Yes, i often translates to in for physical locations. I haven literally means in the garden. You could also sometimes see på in Danish, but i haven is the typical way to say in the garden.
Why is the word order Jeg ser hunden løbe i haven and not Jeg ser løbe hunden i haven?
Danish follows a fairly strict word order. Generally, the subject (Jeg) comes first, followed by the verb (ser), then the object (hunden)—and finally the second verb (løbe) and any additional information (i haven). Placing løbe before hunden would sound unnatural in Danish.
Is ser always used for see or can it mean something else?
Ser typically means see and is used in most contexts where you observe something visually. However, like in English, it can also have figurative uses (such as det ser godt ud, meaning it looks good)—but the core idea remains related to seeing or perceiving something visually.
Your questions are stored by us to improve Elon.io
You've reached your AI usage limit
Sign up to increase your limit.