I might have some Danish lessons sometimes.

Danish film is spreading in a fantastic way.

The Danish glee: the national version of cheerfulness.

I represent all people who are citizens of the Danish nation.

My wife is Danish and we go to Denmark a couple of times a year.

He who does not understand a joke, he does not understand Danish.

The Reformation was immensely important for all of Danish culture.

I always say I have a Danish passport, but I am a New Yorker at heart.

In Bengaluru, I'm Danish's sister, and in Mumbai, he's Kubbra's brother!

A flute without holes, is not a flute. A donut without a hole, is a Danish.

Beer is the Danish national drink, and the Danish national weakness is another beer.

A lot of people who live in Denmark will understand Danish but not necessarily speak it.

I used to love Danish. My father used to make a Boston cream pie. You never see that anymore.

All those glorious years for Danish television and I spent them going, 'Hello! I'm over here!'

My dad read 'The Danish Girl' and fell in love with it. He told me, 'You need to do this film.'

The Danish filmmakers are a unique breed of filmmakers, with the Dogme films and Lars von Trier.

I ride my bike past the Danish Parliament, and it's very accessible - there's really no security!

I have learned that European politics is very much like Danish politics. You have all the rumours.

If anything, I've thought of myself as Scandinavian. Particularly, Danish. We spoke English at home.

I left school when I was 14 to go into Danish films. When I was 17, I went to Paris to make my fortune.

As brilliant as those dark Scandi noir dramas are, not everything has to be shot down a Danish alleyway.

I'd come to believe there was no food more depressing than Danish, a pastry that seemed stale upon arrival

I have good genes. My father is Danish and my mother is Irish and Native American. They both have good skin.

I discovered I'm 60 per cent Viking. Well, more Danish, I suppose. I'm also two-and-a-half per cent Neanderthal.

Danish is a different language, even though Danish people understand Swedes, and very few Swedes understand Danish.

My dad's from Zimbabwe, and my mom is Danish, Irish, and Norwegian, so I have influences from a lot of different places.

I've been watching detective shows, like 'Wallander' and the Danish 'The Killing.' I'm like, 'That would be kind of fun to do.'

I was super happy when I went to Cannes Film Festival - I got a full sponsorship from my favourite Danish brand, Mads Norgaard.

I think Danish girls might be a little more chill - at least, that's what I've heard from people who've also dated American girls.

I have just discovered the beautiful poetry of Soren Ulrik Thomsen. Danish is not the strongest of languages, but he uses it very well.

I don't feel that I'm strictly Danish; I don't feel that my sense of humor is strictly Danish or my human sensibility is strictly Danish.

'Alphabet' by the late Danish poet Inger Christensen. It's a book-length abecedarian poem. It's an activist text but also a portal to wonder.

Scandinavian-Danish cuisine was something quite rustic, mostly known for pastries and smorgasbord cuisine, which in itself has become a joke.

I'm not a great fan of monarchy in general, but I have to say the Danish monarchy is closer to the people; it's not as stuffy as the English one.

In 'A Royal Affair' I had to learn to act like a queen and learned Danish. It's so much different to act in another language. It's the nuances in the words.

You have to have a little humility if you're Danish because you're never going to be able to travel outside the country unless you can speak another language.

I hope, then, that every one who sees 'The Danish Girl' might be galvanized themselves to lead more authentic lives. How much lovelier would the world be then?

I just didn't want people to think, Here's this idiot Danish actor who made up this name to get attention. It's really quite common here, and I've had it all my life.

If I had to reflect on the finest classical male ballet dancers of my time, Vladimir Vasiliev of the Bolshoi and the Danish dancer Eric Bruhn were, I feel, without peer.

It's funny because when I'm outside Australia, I never get to do my Australian accent in anything. It's always a Danish accent or an English accent or an American accent.

You know, for a painter, I was an assistant, and then he knew a lot of movie people. So, how do you say in English, I was an extra. I'm in a lot of Danish pictures as an extra.

English is full of Scandinavian words. Margate, Ramsgate, Billingsgate, any town with a 'gate' on it takes their suffix from the Danish word 'gade' which simply means 'street.'

I wanted to be a cartoonist, but there was no cartoon academy. So I enrolled in the Royal Danish Art Academy School of Architecture. But then I really got smitten by architecture.

When I was growing up, my idea of a writer was someone like Sven Hassel, that mysterious Danish author who wrote thrillers about men clambering over walls and getting tangled in barbed wire.

One of my life's watchwords is 'hyggelig.' It's an untranslatable Danish term for getting together with friends and family and sitting around in a cosy atmosphere with nice food and wine and candles.

In 2007 and 2008, the first two Danish ships were hijacked. I started to research it. I've had the idea of writing in this arena for a long time, but I could never find the angle of what kind of story.

When we started making 'Borgen,' no one had any idea it would have any appeal outside Denmark. No one expected it to follow the success of 'The Killing' because it's basically all about Danish politics.

I went to Chelsea twice when I was 14 and 15. I was at Danish club Odense at the time and came across with a friend to Cobham. We played against West Ham youth away, and the year after, we played Millwall away.

Furniture manufacturing in plastics requires very costly machinery, which the Danish market is not big enough to justify. Or so they say. But show me a plastics manufacturer who dares to take on the experiment.

We have had such a letter movement on two occasions in Denmark when more than a quarter of the adult Danish population participated. Such an achievement, however, demands a really great effort and also a great deal of money.

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