Min veninde smutter tidligt fra mødet, men hun lover at læse referatet senere i aften.

Questions & Answers about Min veninde smutter tidligt fra mødet, men hun lover at læse referatet senere i aften.

Why does it say min veninde and not min ven?

Veninde means female friend, while ven means male friend or sometimes just friend in a more general sense.

So:

  • min veninde = my female friend
  • min ven = my male friend / my friend

A learner may notice that Danish often has gender-specific words for people in some cases, and ven / veninde is a very common pair.

Why is it min and not something else?

Min means my and is used with common gender nouns in the singular.

Danish has two grammatical genders:

  • common gender: uses en
  • neuter: uses et

Since veninde is a common-gender noun (en veninde), the possessive is:

  • min veninde = my female friend

Compare:

  • min ven = my friend (common gender)
  • mit hus = my house (neuter)

So min matches the gender of the noun that follows.

What does smutter mean here?

Smutter comes from at smutte, which often means to slip away, to pop out, or to leave quickly/unobtrusively.

In this sentence, it suggests that the friend is leaving a bit casually or quickly:

  • Min veninde smutter tidligt fra mødet
    = My friend leaves the meeting early / slips away from the meeting early

It is slightly less formal than a verb like forlader (leaves). It can sound natural and conversational.

Why is there no word for is or does in smutter?

Because Danish present tense is usually just one verb form, without an extra helping verb like English sometimes uses.

  • hun smutter = she leaves / she is leaving
  • hun lover = she promises
  • hun læser = she reads / is reading

The Danish present tense often covers both the simple present and what English might express with is ...-ing, depending on context.

Why is it tidligt with a -t at the end?

Tidligt is the adverb form of tidlig (early).

In Danish, adjectives often add -t when used adverbially, especially after verbs:

  • en tidlig morgen = an early morning
  • hun går tidligt = she leaves early

So here:

  • smutter tidligt = leaves early

This -t is very common when an adjective is used to describe how something happens rather than directly describing a noun.

Why is it fra mødet and not just fra møde?

Because mødet means the meeting.

The noun is:

  • et møde = a meeting
  • mødet = the meeting

Danish usually adds the definite article to the end of the noun instead of putting a separate word in front like English the.

So:

  • fra mødet = from the meeting

This is one of the most important features of Danish nouns.

Why is mødet neuter?

Because the noun møde is a neuter noun:

  • et møde = a meeting

Neuter nouns take:

  • et in the indefinite singular
  • -et in the definite singular

So:

  • et møde
  • mødet

Unfortunately, noun gender in Danish often has to be learned together with the noun.

Why is there a comma before men?

In Danish, a comma is commonly used before coordinating conjunctions like men (but) when they connect two clauses.

Here we have:

  • Min veninde smutter tidligt fra mødet
  • men hun lover at læse referatet senere i aften

These are two clauses, so the comma is standard.

This may feel more regular than in English, where comma use can be a bit more style-dependent.

Why does the second clause start with hun lover? Is that normal word order?

Yes. This is normal Danish main-clause word order.

Danish is a V2 language, which means the finite verb usually comes in the second position in a main clause.

In the second clause:

  • hun = subject
  • lover = finite verb

So:

  • hun lover at læse referatet senere i aften

That is completely normal. If another element were placed first, the verb would still stay in second position, for example:

  • Senere i aften lover hun at læse referatet.
Why is it lover at læse? Why is at needed?

After lover (promises), Danish normally uses at before the infinitive:

  • hun lover at læse = she promises to read

Here:

  • lover = finite verb
  • at læse = infinitive phrase (to read)

This is similar to English promise to read. In Danish, the particle at is often used where English has to before an infinitive.

Why is it læse and not læser?

Because after at, Danish uses the infinitive form.

So:

  • læse = to read
  • læser = reads / is reading

Compare:

  • Hun læser referatet. = She reads/is reading the minutes.
  • Hun lover at læse referatet. = She promises to read the minutes.

So at + infinitive is the key pattern here.

What does referatet mean exactly?

Referatet means the minutes, the meeting notes, or the written summary of what was discussed.

The base noun is:

  • et referat = a report / summary / set of minutes
  • referatet = the report / the minutes

In the context of mødet (the meeting), referatet usually means the official written summary or meeting minutes.

Why is it referatet with -et?

Because referat is a neuter noun:

  • et referat = a report / a set of minutes
  • referatet = the report / the minutes

Again, this is the usual neuter definite ending:

  • et ......et

So the ending works just like in:

  • et mødemødet
  • et referatreferatet
What does senere i aften mean, and why not just i aften?

I aften means this evening / tonight, while senere i aften means later this evening / later tonight.

So:

  • i aften = sometime tonight
  • senere i aften = at a later point tonight

Adding senere makes the time reference more specific: she is not going to read it now, but later tonight.

Where do adverbs like tidligt and senere i aften usually go in Danish?

They often go after the verb or later in the clause, depending on what they modify.

In this sentence:

  • smutter tidligt fra mødet
    The adverb tidligt modifies smutter and comes naturally after it.
  • lover at læse referatet senere i aften
    The time phrase senere i aften comes after the object referatet, which is very natural.

Danish word order with adverbs can be flexible, but these placements sound standard and idiomatic.

Could fra mødet also be translated as out of the meeting?

Sometimes yes, depending on context, but from the meeting is the most direct and neutral translation.

  • fra usually means from
  • In context, smutter fra mødet can imply slips out of the meeting

So if you want to capture the slightly casual tone of smutter, English might say:

  • My friend slips out of the meeting early

But grammatically, fra mødet itself is simply from the meeting.

Is this sentence formal or informal Danish?

It is mostly neutral, but smutter makes it feel a bit more conversational and natural.

  • smutter = informal/everyday tone
  • lover at læse referatet = neutral
  • referatet = slightly more formal/business-like because it refers to meeting minutes

So overall, it sounds like normal modern Danish, especially in everyday or workplace conversation.

How would this sentence change if the friend were male?

You would usually change veninde to ven:

  • Min ven smutter tidligt fra mødet, men han lover at læse referatet senere i aften.

Changes:

  • venindeven
  • hunhan

Everything else can stay the same.

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