Danish dictation is not just English speech-to-text with Danish turned on. Real work mixes Danish, English, product names, technical terms and æ, ø and å. A good Mac dictation app should follow that mix without making the text feel translated, foreign or full of small corrections.
Many international tools say they support many languages. That is not the same as Danish feeling good.
If you have to fix æ, ø, å, odd spacing and English sentence patterns afterwards, much of the dictation benefit disappears.
Danish work is mixed
You may say “put it in Notion”, “I am making a prompt for Codex” or “we will follow up in Slack”. It is not pure Danish, and not pure English.
A good dictation experience should live in that mix without making the language artificial.
Where errors show up
Small errors are the most annoying: punctuation, translated names, misunderstood æ/ø/å, product names bent strangely and sentences that sound like translated English.
Each error is small, but together they make you stop trusting the tool.
Language choice as control
Sometimes you want to lock language to Danish. Other times you want auto-detect because you switch during the day.
The goal is not the longest language list. The goal is that your working language feels first-class.
How Vara does it
Vara is built in Denmark with Danish as a real working language. You can speak Danish, English or move between them.
Outcome: less fixing after dictation, more trust that the text sounds like something you would write.
Sources
Try it on your next piece of text.
Vara is free Mac dictation with no account. Hold a key, speak, release, and get text where you already work.
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