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A2 Danish GrammarObject Pronouns

Master Danish object pronouns (mig, dig, ham, hende, etc.) to replace nouns as direct and indirect objects. Learn the difference between subject and object forms, understand pronoun placement in sentences, and practice with common verbs that take object pronouns.

1Object Pronouns Overview

Danish uses different pronoun forms for subjects and objects. Object pronouns replace nouns that receive the action (direct object) or benefit from it (indirect object). Unlike German, Danish doesn't distinguish between accusative and dative - there's just one object form.

Subject vs Object Pronouns

PersonSubjectObjectEnglish Object
1st sing.jegmigme
2nd sing.dudigyou
3rd sing. m.hanhamhim
3rd sing. f.hunhendeher
3rd sing. n.den/detden/detit
1st plur.viosus
2nd plur.Ijeryou
3rd plur.dedemthem

Examples

Kan du hjælpe mig?

Can you help me?

'mig' as direct object

Jeg elsker dig.

I love you.

'dig' as direct object

Vi ser dem hver dag.

We see them every day.

'dem' as direct object

Hun kender ham godt.

She knows him well.

'ham' as direct object

2Direct Object Pronouns

Direct object pronouns replace the noun that directly receives the action of the verb. They answer the question 'whom?' or 'what?' The direct object pronoun usually comes immediately after the verb in main clauses.

Common Verbs with Direct Objects

Danish VerbEnglishExample
seseeJeg ser hende
hørehearHun hører mig
kendeknowVi kender dem
elskeloveHan elsker dig

Examples

Jeg så ham i går.

I saw him yesterday.

Direct object after verb

Hørte du mig?

Did you hear me?

Question with object pronoun

De besøgte os i weekenden.

They visited us on the weekend.

'os' as direct object

Læreren roste jer.

The teacher praised you (pl.).

'jer' for plural 'you'

3Indirect Object Pronouns

Indirect object pronouns indicate to whom or for whom an action is done. They often appear with verbs of giving, telling, or showing. In Danish, the indirect object typically comes before the direct object. Danish uses the same pronoun forms for both direct and indirect objects.

Verbs with Indirect Objects

DanishEnglishPattern
givegivegive + IO + DO
viseshowvise + IO + DO
fortælletellfortælle + IO + DO
sendesendsende + IO + DO

Examples

Giv mig bogen.

Give me the book.

'mig' = indirect object (to me)

Hun viste os vejen.

She showed us the way.

'os' before direct object 'vejen'

Jeg fortalte ham historien.

I told him the story.

Indirect object 'ham' first

Send mig en besked.

Send me a message.

Imperative with indirect object

4Pronoun Position in Sentences

In main clauses, object pronouns come directly after the verb. In subordinate clauses, they come after the subject (and any adverbs like 'ikke'). When there are two objects, the indirect object comes before the direct object. In imperatives, the pronoun follows the verb.

Pronoun Position Rules

Clause TypePositionExample
Main clauseAfter verbJeg ser ham
QuestionAfter subjectSer du hende?
SubordinateAfter S + adv...at hun ikke ser mig
Two objectsIO before DOGiv mig den

Examples

Jeg ved, at hun elsker ham.

I know that she loves him.

Subordinate clause: after subject

Kan du give mig den?

Can you give me it?

IO 'mig' before DO 'den'

Ring til mig i morgen!

Call me tomorrow!

Imperative with preposition + pronoun

Fordi han ikke kender os.

Because he doesn't know us.

Subordinate clause word order