Dansk

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a.1.Danish.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
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References in classic literature
To this end, Communists of various nationalities have assembled in London, and sketched the following Manifesto, to be published in the English, French, German, Italian, Flemish and Danish languages.
In the Danish language, the word JYSK refers to anything or anyone from the Jutland peninsula in Denmark.
GEMS United School, a school of approximately 550 students in grades PreK-12, offers 12 Advanced Placement courses, multiple humanities and science electives, 28 winning athletic teams, choirs, bands, student councils and newspapers, partnership with The Danish Language School for heritage language courses (with more languages planned), and even a full string orchestra.
The guriya ghar is an adaptation of the classical play 'A Doll's House' written by Henrik Ibsen in 1879 in Danish language. The actual characters included Nora, Torvald Helmer, Krogstad, Mrs.
4 The Danish language has the word Hygge, which means a feeling of relaxing togetherness.
The chaplains sought to accommodate Euro-African children by converting them to Christianity and promoting their fluency and literacy in the Danish language. Ipsen emphasizes that the hybrid social position of Euro-African families was shaped "by the unequal power balance of the Atlantic world, and it was created by local practices of slave trading" (p.
Interviewed by the BBC about a course she teaches on achieving hygge to British students learning the Danish language, lecturer Susanne Nilsson explained how it works.
'Only six million people speak the Danish language. To be competitive abroad, we need to offer quality films,' he noted.
Some other languages also have their own similar words for it - Dutch has 'gezelligheid', Norwegian has 'koselig' - but it's only in the Danish language that it exists as both an adjective and a verb.
In chapter nine, in section three, which concentrates on historical transformation, Yordanka Madzharova Bruteig, PhD researcher at the University of Oslo, introduces a most captivating discussion of the discourse beginning in 2004 by Storting's members to modernize the antiquated Danish language form of the original constitution into contemporary Norwegian--indeed a textual reform making the Constitution more accessible.
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