↑ ۱٫۰۱٫۱۱٫۲۱٫۳۱٫۴/əð,əl,ən/ become همخوان هجایی[ð̩,l̩,m̩,n̩,ŋ̍] in a process known as schwa-assimilation ([m̩,ŋ̍] are variants of /ən/, assimilated to the place of the preceding consonant). The process also often affects /ə/ after a long vowel or /ð,j,l,n,v/, but these types of assimilation are not as ubiquitous as, and are more contextually constrained than, the aforementioned combinations (Basbøll 2005:293ff), so they are not reflected in transcription.
↑In Standard Copenhagen Danish, a stressed syllable has a lower بسامد پایه than the following unstressed syllable, which then has a high-falling pitch.
↑Stød, which is realized most often as creaky voice (found in English as the vocal fry register; ⟨◌̰⟩ in standard IPA), can only occur after a long vowel or a sequence of a short vowel and [ð,j,l,m,n,ŋ,w,ɐ̯] in a stressed syllable. Phonologically long vowels with stød are shorter in realization, so they are transcribed as short in this guide (cf. pæn/ˈpɛ:ˀn/[ˈpʰeˀn] 'nice', pen/ˈpɛnˀ/[ˈpʰenˀ] 'pen').