LingoStoriesLingoStories
🇩🇰B1

B1 Danish GrammarRelative Clauses

Connect ideas in Danish using relative pronouns der, som, and hvad with proper word order in subordinate clauses.

1Der and Som

'Der' and 'som' both mean 'who/that/which'. 'Der' is used as subject, 'som' can be subject or object.

Der vs Som

FunctionPronounExample
Subjectder/somManden, der/som bor her
ObjectsomBogen, som jeg læste
Object (omitted)(som)Bogen, jeg læste

Examples

Manden, der bor her, er min nabo.

The man who lives here is my neighbor.

der as subject

Bogen, som jeg læste, var spændende.

The book that I read was exciting.

som as object

Kvinden, der taler, er læge.

The woman who is speaking is a doctor.

der for people

Filmen, jeg så i går, var god.

The movie I saw yesterday was good.

som omitted

2Word Order in Relative Clauses

In relative clauses, 'ikke' and adverbs come BEFORE the verb (ikke normal V2).

Adverb Position

Main clauseRelative clause
Han kommer ikke...der ikke kommer
Han har aldrig set...der aldrig har set
Han kan godt lide...der godt kan lide

Examples

Manden, der ikke taler dansk, er turist.

The man who doesn't speak Danish is a tourist.

ikke before verb

En person, der altid kommer til tiden.

A person who always arrives on time.

altid before verb

Noget, jeg aldrig har prøvet før.

Something I have never tried before.

aldrig before har

Folk, der godt kan lide kaffe.

People who like coffee.

godt before kan

3Hvad and Hvilket

'Hvad' introduces clauses about things. 'Hvilket' refers back to whole clauses.

Hvad/Hvilket Uses

PronounUseExample
hvadthing/ideaDet, hvad du siger
hvilketrefers to clauseHan kom, hvilket glædede mig
alt hvadeverything thatAlt hvad du vil

Examples

Det var ikke hvad jeg mente.

That was not what I meant.

hvad for things

Han vandt, hvilket overraskede alle.

He won, which surprised everyone.

hvilket for whole clause

Alt hvad du behøver.

Everything that you need.

alt hvad

Det, hvad han sagde, var sandt.

What he said was true.

det hvad

4Prepositions with Relatives

Prepositions typically come at the end of the relative clause in Danish.

Preposition Placement

EnglishDanish
the house in which I livehuset, jeg bor i
the person I talked topersonen, jeg talte med
the thing I thought aboutdet, jeg tænkte på

Examples

Huset, jeg bor i, er gammelt.

The house I live in is old.

preposition at end

Stolen, hun sidder på, er ny.

The chair she is sitting on is new.

på at end

Manden, jeg arbejder med, er sød.

The man I work with is nice.

med at end

Det, du taler om, er interessant.

What you're talking about is interesting.

om at end