Practice Ordering at a Dansk Café
Cafés are where you'll have your most repeated Dansk conversation: ordering a coffee, choosing a pastry, finding a seat, paying, and saying goodbye. This scenario teaches you the entire café script, including the small variations between sit-down and takeaway, and the country-specific coffee vocabulary that confuses first-time visitors. You'll practise ordering by size, asking for milk type, requesting tap water, and handling the moment when a barista responds in English — a polite 'Dansk, please' usually does the trick.
Sample Dansk conversation
Hej! Velkommen til vores café. Hvad kan jeg få til dig i dag?
Hello! Welcome to our café. What can I get you today?Jeg vil gerne have en kaffe, tak.
I'd like a coffee, please.Selvfølgelig! Vil du have en espresso, en cappuccino eller en latte?
Of course! Would you like an espresso, a cappuccino, or a latte?En espresso, tak.
An espresso, please.Vil du have den i lille eller stor?
Would you like that small or large?Lille, tak.
Small, please.
Hvad du lærer
- Order coffee, tea, or pastries by name and size
- Choose between takeaway and table service
- Ask for sweeteners, milk alternatives, or extra ice
- Pay by card or cash and understand the total
- Ask for the Wi-Fi password politely
Ofte stillede spørgsmål
What's the Dansk word for 'to take away'?
There's a specific phrase that varies by country (e.g. 'para llevar' in Spanish). The scenario teaches the most common form for Dansk.
How do I order a coffee with oat milk in Dansk?
We include the modern milk-alternative vocabulary (oat, almond, soy) in the word list. Most cafés in Dansk-speaking cities now stock alternatives.
Is it rude to sit at a café table without ordering in Dansk?
Yes — café etiquette in most Dansk-speaking countries expects you to order before claiming a table. The scenario teaches the phrase 'May I sit here while I order?'.
How do I ask for tap water in Dansk?
There's a specific construction — tap water is a separate term from bottled water and is sometimes free, sometimes not. The vocabulary list covers both.