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  1. Danish is a North Germanic language descended from Old Norse, and English is a West Germanic language descended from Old English. Old Norse exerted a strong influence on Old English in the early medieval period.

    • 6.0 million (2019)
  2. Hace 3 días · Danish belongs to the East Scandinavian branch of North Germanic languages. It began to separate from the other Scandinavian languages, to which it is closely related, about ad 1000. The oldest Danish records are runic inscriptions (c. ad 250–800) found from Jutland to southern Sweden; the earliest manuscripts in Danish date from ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The Danish language developed during the Middle Ages out of Old East Norse, the common predecessor of Danish and Swedish. It was a late form of common Old Norse. The Danish philologist Johannes Brøndum-Nielsen divided the history of Danish into "Old Danish" from 800 AD to 1525 and "Modern Danish" from 1525 and onwards.

  4. Native name: dansk [ˈdanˀsɡ] Language family: Indo-European, Germanic, North Germanic, East Scandinavian, Continental Scandinavian. Number of speakers: c. 5.6 million. Spoken in: Denmark, Greenland, Faroe Islands, Germany, Sweden, Norway. First written: 9th century AD. Writing system: Runic script (9th-11th centuries) then the Latin alphabet.

  5. Danish, a North Germanic language, has roots stretching back to the Iron Age and has undergone significant changes to become the language spoken in Denmark today. Early Beginnings: Old Norse Influence. The Danish language traces its roots back to the Iron Age, specifically to the Old East Norse dialect of the Old Norse language family.

  6. 6 de sept. de 1999 · Their linguistic history begins to get interesting around 2000 B.C. when the first Indo-European immigrants, the “single-grave people,” take over Denmark, bringing their language with them. Since then, Danish has ranged from the language of the vast Viking empire to a language spoken only by the people in and around a small ...

  7. Danish language. Icelandic language. Faroese language. (Show more) Germanic languages. Derivation of Germanic languages from Proto-Germanic. Scandinavian languages, group of Germanic languages consisting of modern standard Danish, Swedish, Norwegian (Dano-Norwegian and New Norwegian), Icelandic, and Faroese.