Sono piuttosto interessato al fatto che il piccolo paese scandinavo, la Danimarca🇩🇰, abbia un confine con il più grande paese dell’UE. La gente non ne parla molto perché la Germania ha molti più confini con paesi grandi come 🇳🇱🇫🇷🇵🇱🇧🇪🇦🇹Ho sentito da un insegnante che il motivo per cui il danese suona simile al tedesco è la vicinanza.

Qual è il rapporto complessivo tra popolo e governo? Siete fratelli? Molti scambi e acquisti tra paesi? Hai parenti che vivono in Danimarca o hai un partner danese?

https://i.redd.it/dqkga7yevsrg1.jpeg

di batukaming

24 commenti

  1. squidguy_mc on

    im from south germany so idk but generally since the EU we are friends

  2. Ujilus123 on

    german flag is cooler but they talk funny… friends and eu partners

  3. trumpet_kenny on

    Germany has a national minority of Danish speakers, who maintain their own traditions, language, culture, school and relationship to Denmark despite being in Germany. And the opposite is true in Denmark. The history and make up of Schleswig-Holstein and southern Jutland is very interesting, for such a small strip of land.

  4. ComprehensiveBerry48 on

    Germans love to spend holidays in Denmark;) at least I do.

  5. Every weekend the Danes raid Lidl and Aldi stores in northern Germany for their cheap soft drinks.

  6. Imo good. I sometimes have phone calls with people from denmark and the people and calls are always nice.

  7. Denova_Vendetta on

    There’s a minority party in Schleswig-Holstein named SSW. They have always 1 Seat in the Bundestag. They are not subject to 5-Percent threshold.

  8. well, friendly neutral i’d say..? There’s nothing good or bad in particular i could think of, they are neighbours.

  9. Previous_Maize2507 on

    We are neighbours 🙂

    We got a fence on the border though. It is supposed to keep boars on our side and protect their boars from the african boar plague. What a dumb idea, considering how smart pigs are.

    Was to Denmark twice. I like them (:

  10. Used-Disaster-5735 on

    My dad grew up in Schleswig, a region that’s switched back and forth between Danish and German control over several centuries through conflict and annexation. Because of the unique political history, many signs in the regions are quad lingual (German, Danish, Low German and North Frisian). Since my Father’s grandmother was Danish, 2 of my aunts were able to attend the Danish kindergarten in the town he grew up in and one of them lives in Denmark today. Even the political party that represents the Danish and Frisian minorities is exempt from the electorate threshold to maintain seats in the Landtag. In contrast to Denmark, Southern Jütland which was also under German control has a sizable (but much smaller) German minority.

    I would otherwise assume that Denmark has a warm and cooperative diplomatic relationship with Germany.

  11. sonofapiece on

    If I remember right from a documentation. The German Danish border is one of the few borders which is voted by the people living in that area. Maybe it is even the only border in the world which is voted by the people (not 100% sure anymore)

  12. Einszwo12 on

    I love visiting Denmark and hygge 🙈. Great handball envy though 🤪

  13. Independent-T-Rex on

    They are friendly until they sit and drink together

  14. vikingosegundo on

    I had a girlfriend from Bolivia. We went there to visit her family. One room was sublet to a Danish student.
    My girlfriend’s bff had asked me to bring her a special brand of chocolate creme (similar to Nutella). We placed it in the fridge until we met her. She opened it — it was hollowed out. My gf and her friend thought I played a prank on them. But it was the Danish guy who had craved chocolate so much that he couldn’t resist and ate nearly all of it except a slim layer to make the robbery less obvious.

    If you ever have a Danish roommate: get a lock for your fridge.

  15. Far-Abalone-4160 on

    We’re neighbours in a good way. We care and send them to the right train section to Flensburg when they sit in the one to Kiel. 

  16. vikingosegundo on

    My brother used to live in Cairo for a while. He became friends with some Danish students. They bought a living crocodile (about 1m in length) and kept it on their balcony. It jumped to its death. Suicide can’t be ruled out.

    If you have Danish neighbours: Don’t park your car under their balcony. It might be raining crocodiles.

  17. Lopsided-Weather6469 on

    Danish sounds nothing like German. They’re in different branches of the Germanic language family.

    I can usually kind of make out the gist of a text written in Danish but I’m far from actually understanding it. 

    Danish is about as different from German as English is from German. 

  18. user38835 on

    They shut down paper post, we run everything via paper post.

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