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Danes like to see themselves as a relaxed, casual society that doesn't put too much emphasis on formal manners.
That said, there are powerful unwritten rules that will earn you sullen, silent disapproval if you do not follow them.
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If it is your birthday, your friends or colleagues will congratulate you heartily, and celebrate by putting a Danish flag on your desk, regardless of what your actual nationality may be. They will not, however, be providing any sweets. That's your job, and it is considered good form to bring a cake or fruit tart for the after-lunch period. If your workplace is particularly busy, you can just announce by group email that the cake is in the kitchen for whenever anybody has time. There, each colleague can cut his or her own piece, carefully slicing the last bit into tinier and tinier halves so you will have a small, nearly transparent sliver to take home with you at the end of the day.
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Should you for some reason be eating when someone else is not - say, you're having an early or late lunch while your colleagues are on their way to a meeting - Danes like to say "Velbekommen!", or "Enjoy your food!" They like to do this when your mouth is entirely full of pasta or some other volumunious dish. I find this incredibly annoying. Just nod. You are not required to respond.
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Her son Crown Prince Frederik is in his 40s and prefers the informal "du", although his snobbish, jealous younger brother Prince Joachim still reportedly insists on "De". Perhaps the only reason "De" is still taught in language schools is Joachim's penchant for importing wives from abroad.
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Drop an watermelon onto your foot? Ho! Danes don't do this just to foreigners - they do it to each other. There's an old fashioned concept called a "kvajbajer": when you make a fool of yourself, you are supposed to buy a beer for everyone who enjoyed watching you. Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! |
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