Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet, men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet.

Breakdown of Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet, men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet.

i
in
on
bordet
the table
men
but
vi
we
brødet
the bread
køleskabet
the refrigerator
grøntsagen
the vegetable
opbevare
to store
opbevare
to keep

Questions & Answers about Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet, men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet.

Why do the nouns have endings like -ne and -et instead of a separate word for the?

Because Danish usually puts the definite article at the end of the noun instead of using a separate word like English the.

Examples from the sentence:

  • grøntsager = vegetables → grøntsagerne = the vegetables
  • brød = bread → brødet = the bread
  • køleskab = refrigerator/fridge → køleskabet = the refrigerator
  • bord = table → bordet = the table

So English the vegetables becomes Danish grøntsagerne, not de grøntsager in this sentence.

How can I tell that grøntsagerne is plural, but brødet is singular?

The endings show it.

  • grøntsagerne

    • grøntsag = vegetable
    • grøntsager = vegetables
    • grøntsagerne = the vegetables
    • So this is definite plural.
  • brødet

    • brød = bread
    • brødet = the bread
    • So this is definite singular.

A useful shortcut:

  • -ne often marks definite plural
  • -et often marks definite singular for neuter nouns
Why is it brødet opbevarer vi instead of vi opbevarer brødet?

This is because Danish follows the V2 rule in main clauses: the finite verb normally comes in second position.

In the first clause, the subject comes first:

  • Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet.

In the second clause, brødet is moved to the front for emphasis/contrast:

  • men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet.

Once brødet takes first position, the verb opbevarer must come next, and the subject vi comes after the verb.

So the word order is not random; it is a normal Danish pattern.

What is the effect of putting brødet first in the second clause?

It adds contrast.

The sentence is basically saying:

  • The vegetables go in the fridge,
  • but the bread goes on the table.

By putting brødet first, Danish highlights it as the contrasting item. It is a bit like stressing the bread in English.

So this version feels more like:

  • We store the vegetables in the fridge, but the bread we keep on the table.
Could I also say men vi opbevarer brødet på bordet?

Yes, absolutely.

  • Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet, men vi opbevarer brødet på bordet.

That is grammatical and more neutral in word order.

Compared with:

  • ..., men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet.

the version with brødet first gives more contrast and focus to the bread.

So both are correct, but they do not sound exactly the same in emphasis.

Why does the sentence use i køleskabet but på bordet?

Because Danish uses different prepositions depending on the kind of location:

  • i = in / inside
  • = on / on top of

So:

  • i køleskabet = in the fridge
  • på bordet = on the table

This is very similar to English here. A fridge is treated as an enclosed space, while a table is treated as a surface.

What tense is opbevarer, and what is the basic form of the verb?

Opbevarer is the present tense of opbevare.

  • opbevare = to store / to keep
  • opbevarer = store / keep

Danish present tense is often formed by adding -r to the infinitive.

In this sentence, the present tense expresses a general habit or normal arrangement, just like English simple present:

  • We store the vegetables...
  • We keep the bread...
Why is opbevarer repeated in both parts of the sentence?

Because the sentence has two main clauses joined by men:

  1. Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet
  2. men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet

Each full main clause needs its own finite verb, so opbevarer appears twice.

Danish can sometimes avoid repetition if the whole sentence is structured differently, for example:

  • Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet og brødet på bordet.

But in your sentence, the repetition is natural and helps support the contrast.

Why is there a comma before men?

Because men is joining two main clauses, and Danish normally uses a comma there.

So:

  • Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet, men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet.

This is standard punctuation.

It works much like English when you write:

  • We store the vegetables in the fridge, but we keep the bread on the table.
Why do brødet, køleskabet, and bordet all end in -et?

Because those nouns are neuter nouns in Danish.

Their basic forms are:

  • et brød
  • et køleskab
  • et bord

When a neuter noun becomes definite singular, it often takes -et:

  • brødet
  • køleskabet
  • bordet

By contrast, grøntsag is a common-gender noun:

  • en grøntsag

But in your sentence it is plural, so you see the plural definite form grøntsagerne instead.

AI Language TutorTry it ↗
Your avatar
What's the best way to learn Danish grammar?
Danish grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.

Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor

Start learning Danish

Master Danish — from Vi opbevarer grøntsagerne i køleskabet, men brødet opbevarer vi på bordet to fluency

All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods, no signup needed.

  • Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
  • Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
  • Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
  • AI tutor to answer your grammar questions