When talking about drinking in Danish, you use the verb drikke. It's a regular -e verb, so its conjugations follow a predictable pattern. For example, in the present tense, you say "jeg drikker" (I drink) and "vi drikker" (we drink). In the past tense, it becomes "jeg drak" (I drank), which is an irregular form you'll need to remember.
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This sentence means 'We can drink coffee together.' The word order is subject (Vi), modal verb (kan), main verb (drikke), object (kaffe), and then adverb (sammen).
This question means 'What would you like to drink for dinner?' The structure is question word (Hvad), modal verb (vil), subject (du), main verb (drikke), and then prepositional phrase (til aftensmad).
This sentence means 'I usually drink water in the morning.' 'Plejer at' is a common phrase meaning 'usually' or 'tend to'. The main verb 'drikke' follows 'at'.
This sentence means 'We can drink coffee together this afternoon.' It follows the standard Danish sentence structure with subject, modal verb, main verb, and then the rest of the sentence.
This sentence means 'Why don't you want to drink more water?' In interrogative sentences with a 'hv-' word, the verb usually comes second.
This sentence means 'The children like to drink juice for breakfast.' The infinitive 'at drikke' follows 'kan lide at'.
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