300 in Danish
300 in Other Languages
About 300 in Danish
In Danish, 300 is written and spoken as trehundrede.
300 is an even number. 300 comes up regularly in Danish conversations — in stores, when giving your phone number, reading addresses, or discussing dates and ages.
Learning 300 in Danish is a step toward real communicative confidence. Numbers are unavoidable — they appear in every aspect of daily life, from prices and timetables to addresses and phone calls.
Learning Numbers in Danish
What makes Danish numbers challenging
The vigesimal system for 50-90 is the primary hurdle — these numbers bear no resemblance to what an English speaker would expect. Halvtreds (50), tres (60), halvfjerds (70), firs (80), and halvfems (90) must simply be memorized. Combined with the ones-before-tens inversion (femogfyrre = 45, not 54), Danish numbers require intense practice. Even Swedes and Norwegians find Danish numbers confusing, and Danish pronunciation is notoriously soft and mumbled.
Tips for learning Danish numbers
Memorize the vigesimal tens (50-90) as complete words before trying to form compound numbers. Practice in pairs since Danes read phone numbers in two-digit groups. Watch for the inversion: when you hear the ones digit first, hold it mentally until you hear the tens. Listen to Danish media at slower speeds to train your ear for the soft pronunciation. Many Danes can switch to English, so do not hesitate to ask for clarification.