Jeg klikker på linket, men hjemmesiden åbner for langsomt.

Breakdown of Jeg klikker på linket, men hjemmesiden åbner for langsomt.

jeg
I
men
but
åbne
to open
langsomt
slowly
for
too
hjemmesiden
the website
linket
the link
klikke på
to click on

Questions & Answers about Jeg klikker på linket, men hjemmesiden åbner for langsomt.

Why is it klikker på and not just klikker?

In Danish, at klikke på noget is the normal way to say to click on something.

So:

  • Jeg klikker på linket = I click on the link / I am clicking on the link

If you only say jeg klikker, it usually sounds incomplete unless the object is already obvious from context, or it may suggest the sound of clicking rather than the action on a screen item.

So is part of the usual verb pattern here.

Why is it linket and not et link?

Because linket is the definite form, meaning the link.

Danish usually adds the definite article to the end of the noun:

  • et link = a link
  • linket = the link

This is different from English, where the is a separate word.

Why is hjemmesiden one word?

Danish writes compound nouns as one word.

So:

  • hjemmeside = website/homepage
  • hjemmesiden = the website

This is very common in Danish. English often allows separate words where Danish prefers a compound.

Examples:

  • computerprogram
  • mobiltelefon
  • hjemmeside

Once you learn to expect compounds, Danish spelling starts to feel more predictable.

Why is there no separate word for the before hjemmesiden?

Because the definite article is already built into the noun.

  • hjemmeside = website
  • hjemmesiden = the website

So hjemmesiden already includes the idea of the.

Danish only uses a separate definite word such as den, det, or de in certain situations, especially when there is an adjective:

  • hjemmesiden = the website
  • den langsomme hjemmeside = the slow website

So in your sentence, a separate the-word is not needed.

Why does the sentence use åbner? Can a website really open in Danish?

Yes. In Danish, it is very natural to say that a website, page, door, app, file, and so on opens.

So:

  • hjemmesiden åbner = the website opens

This does not necessarily mean the website is opening itself in a literal sense. It is just the normal way to describe what happens on the screen.

English often does the same:

  • The page opens slowly
  • The app opens quickly

So this usage is very natural in both languages.

What does for mean in for langsomt?

Here for means too.

So:

  • langsomt = slowly
  • for langsomt = too slowly

This is a very common pattern in Danish:

  • for dyrt = too expensive
  • for hurtigt = too fast
  • for sent = too late

So this for is not the same as the English preposition for. It is an intensifier meaning that something is excessive.

Why is it langsomt and not langsom?

Because langsomt is being used as an adverb, modifying the verb åbner.

Compare:

  • Hjemmesiden er langsom = The website is slow

    • here langsom is an adjective describing the noun
  • Hjemmesiden åbner langsomt = The website opens slowly

    • here langsomt is an adverb describing how it opens

In Danish, many adverbs are formed with -t from the adjective:

  • hurtighurtigt
  • langsomlangsomt
  • dårligdårligt

So for langsomt means too slowly.

Why is the word order men hjemmesiden åbner and not something with inversion?

Because men is a coordinating conjunction, like but in English.

It joins two main clauses:

  • Jeg klikker på linket
  • hjemmesiden åbner for langsomt

After men, the second clause keeps normal main-clause order:

  • subject + verb
  • hjemmesiden åbner

You get inversion in Danish when something else is placed first in the clause:

  • Men så åbner hjemmesiden for langsomt
    Here comes first, so the verb comes before the subject.

But in your sentence, the subject hjemmesiden comes first, so the order stays normal.

Does jeg klikker mean I click or I am clicking?

It can mean either one, depending on context.

Danish present tense often covers both:

  • I click
  • I am clicking

So jeg klikker på linket could mean:

  • I click on the link
  • I am clicking on the link

The surrounding context usually tells you which meaning is intended. Danish does not have a separate present continuous form like English am clicking.

Is the comma before men necessary?

Yes, in standard Danish this comma is normal and expected.

The sentence has two independent clauses joined by men:

  • Jeg klikker på linket
  • hjemmesiden åbner for langsomt

Because of that, Danish normally places a comma before men.

So the punctuation here is standard and correct.

How is å in åbner pronounced?

The letter å is pronounced roughly like the vowel in English more or saw, though not exactly the same.

So åbner sounds approximately like OB-ner.

A few pronunciation notes:

  • å is a separate letter in Danish
  • it is not the same as a
  • åbner begins with that rounded å sound

Also, the r in Danish is softer than in most English accents, so the full word may sound less sharply pronounced than an English speaker expects.

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