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81 Deens
Danish -
82 danes
Danish [adj]; Dane [n] -
83 დანიური
Danish -
84 tanska
Danish (language) -
85 tanskalainen
Danish (person, adjective) -
86 даниялық
Danish -
87 дат тілі
Danish -
88 dänisch
-
89 датская крона
Бизнес, юриспруденция. Русско-английский словарь > датская крона
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90 Danca
Danish -
91 dana
Danish -
92 danino
Danish woman -
93 danés
adj.Danish, pertaining to the Danes.m.1 Danish, Danish language, language of Denmark.2 Dane, inhabitant of Denmark, native of Denmark.* * *► adjetivo1 Danish► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 (persona) Dane1 (idioma) Danish————————1 (idioma) Danish* * *(f. - danesa)noun adj.* * *danés, -esa1.ADJ Danish2. SM / F1) (=persona) Dane3.SM (=idioma) Danish* * *I- nesa adjetivo DanishII- nesa masculino, femenino1) ( persona) (m) Dane, Danish man; (f) Dane, Danish woman* * *= Danish, Dane.Nota: Nombre de nacionalidad.Ex. Committees have been set up to clarify issues of cataloguing in Danish libraries and the National Bibliography.Ex. The target groups were primarily adult Danes who needed to be kept informed of the market, but also West European children temporarily in Denmark.----* gran danés = Great Dane.* * *I- nesa adjetivo DanishII- nesa masculino, femenino1) ( persona) (m) Dane, Danish man; (f) Dane, Danish woman* * *= Danish, Dane.Nota: Nombre de nacionalidad.Ex: Committees have been set up to clarify issues of cataloguing in Danish libraries and the National Bibliography.
Ex: The target groups were primarily adult Danes who needed to be kept informed of the market, but also West European children temporarily in Denmark.* gran danés = Great Dane.* * *Danishmasculine, feminine2* * *
Del verbo dañar: ( conjugate dañar)
dañes es:
2ª persona singular (tú) presente subjuntivo
Multiple Entries:
danés
dañar
danés◊ - nesa adjetivo
Danish
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
(f) Dane, Danish womanb)
dañar ( conjugate dañar) verbo transitivo ( en general) to damage;
‹salud/organismo› to be bad for
dañarse verbo pronominal
1 ( en general) to be/get damaged;
‹ salud› to damage
2 (Col, Ven)
[ aparato] to break
danés,-esa
I adjetivo Danish
II m,f (persona) Dane
III sustantivo masculino
1 (idioma) Danish
2 gran danés, (perro) Great Dane
dañar verbo transitivo
1 (deteriorar, estropear) to damage: este producto puede dañar el esmalte, this product is damaging to the enamelwork
2 (herir) to hurt, (perjudicar, molestar) to harm, prejudice
' danés' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
danesa
- gran
- hablarse
- dinamarqués
English:
Dane
- Danish
- great
* * *danés, -esa♦ adjDanish♦ nm,f[persona] Dane♦ nm1. [lengua] Danish2.gran danés [perro] Great Dane* * *I adj DanishII m, danesa f Dane* * *: Danish* * *danés1 adj Danishdanés2 n1. (persona) Dane2. (idioma) Danish -
94 danese
1. m noun adj Danish2. m f Dane* * *danese agg. Danish◆ s.m.2 ( lingua) (the) Danish (language): capisci il danese?, do you understand Danish?3 ( cane) Great Dane.* * *[da'nese]1. agg2. sm/f3. sm1) (lingua) Danish2) (cane) Great Dane* * *[da'nese] 1.aggettivo Danish2.sostantivo maschile e sostantivo femminile Dane3.sostantivo maschile1) (lingua) Danish2) (cane) Great Dane* * *danese/da'nese/ ⇒ 25, 16DanishII m. e f.DaneIII sostantivo m.1 (lingua) Danish2 (cane) Great Dane. -
95 Dänisch
Adj. Danish* * *Danish* * *Dä|nisch(e) ['dɛːnɪʃ]ntDanishSee:→ auch Deutsch(e)* * *Dä·nisch[ˈdɛ:nɪʃ]nt dekl wie adj Danish* * *Adjektiv, Danish* * *A. adj Danishdas Dänische Danish, the Danish language* * *Adjektiv, Danish* * *adj.Danish adj. -
96 dänisch
Adj. Danish* * *Danish* * *Dä|nisch(e) ['dɛːnɪʃ]ntDanishSee:→ auch Deutsch(e)* * *Dä·nisch[ˈdɛ:nɪʃ]nt dekl wie adj Danish* * *Adjektiv, Danish* * *A. adj Danishdas Dänische Danish, the Danish language* * *Adjektiv, Danish* * *adj.Danish adj. -
97 Danskr
a. Danish;dönsk tunga, the Danish (or old Scandinavian) language.* * *adj., Danir, pl. Danes; Dan-mörk, f. Denmark, i. e. the mark, march, or border of the Danes; Dana-veldi, n. the Danish empire; Dana-virki, n. the Danish wall, and many compds, vide Fms. xi. This adj. requires special notice, because of the phrase Dönsk tunga ( the Danish tongue), the earliest recorded name of the common Scandinavian tongue. It must be borne in mind that the ‘Danish’ of the old Saga times applies not to the nation, but to the empire. According to the researches of the late historian P.A. Munch, the ancient Danish empire, at least at times, extended over almost all the countries bordering on the Skagerac (Vík); hence a Dane became in Engl. synonymous with a Scandinavian; the language spoken by the Scandinavians was called Danish; and ‘Dönsk tunga’ is even used to denote Scandinavian extraction in the widest extent, vide Sighvat in Fms. iv. 73, Eg. ch. 51, Grág. ii. 71, 72. During the 11th and 12th centuries the name was much in use, but as the Danish hegemony in Scandinavia grew weaker, the name became obsolete, and Icel. writers of the 13th and 14th centuries began to use the name ‘Norræna,’ Norse tongue, from Norway their own mother country, and the nearest akin to Icel. in customs and idiom. ‘Swedish’ never occurs, because Icel. had little intercourse with that country, although the Scandinavian tongue was spoken there perhaps in a more antique form than in the sister countries. In the 15th century, when almost all connection with Scandinavia was broken off for nearly a century, the Norræna in its turn became an obsolete word, and was replaced by the present word ‘Icelandic,’ which kept its ground, because the language in the mean time underwent great changes on the Scandinavian continent. The Reformation, the translation of the Old and New Testaments into Icelandic (Oddr Gotskalksson, called the Wise, translated and published the N. T. in 1540, and bishop Gudbrand the whole Bible in 1584), a fresh growth of religious literature, hymns, sermons, and poetry (Hallgrímr Pétrsson, Jón Vídalín), the regeneration of the old literature in the 17th and 18th centuries (Brynjólfr Sveinsson, Arni Magnússon, Þormóðr Torfason),—all this put an end to the phrases Dönsk tunga and Norræna; and the last phrase is only used to denote obsolete grammatical forms or phrases, as opposed to the forms and phrases of the living language. The translators of the Bible often say ‘vort Íslenzkt mál,’ our Icelandic tongue, or ‘vort móður mál,’ our mother tongue; móður-málið mitt, Pass. 35. 9. The phrase ‘Dönsk tunga’ has given rise to a great many polemical antiquarian essays: the last and the best, by which this question may be regarded as settled, is that by Jon Sigurdsson in the preface to Lex. Poët.; cp. also that of Pál Vídalín in Skýr. s. v., also published in Latin at the end of the old Ed. of Gunnl. Saga, 1775. -
98 Däne
* * *der DäneDane* * *Dä|ne ['dɛːnə]m -n, -nDane, Danish man/boy* * *Dä·ne, Dä·nin<-n, -n>[ˈdɛ:nə, ˈdɛ:nɪn]m, f Dane* * *der; Dänen, Dänen Dane* * *er ist Däne he’s Danish* * *der; Dänen, Dänen Daneer ist Däne — he is Danish or a Dane
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99 danois
danois, e [danwa, waz]1. adjective2. masculine noun( = langue) Danish3. masculine noun, feminine* * *Danoise danwa, az nom masculin, féminin Dane* * *danwa, waz nm/f Danois, -e* * *A ⇒ Les nationalités adj Danish.B nm1 ⇒ Les langues Ling Danish;2 ( chien) Great Dane.————————————————nom masculin -
100 Danca
"1. Danish, the Danish language. 2. (speaking, writing) in Danish, Danish. 3. Danish (speech, writing); spoken in Danish; written in Danish."
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