释义 |
Dano-|ˈdeɪnəʊ| used as combining form of Danus Dane, Danish, = ‘Danish and’, as Dano-German, Dano-Irish; Dano-Norwegian n. and a., (a modified form) of the Danish language used in Norway after its separation from Denmark, and now one of the two standard languages.
1931Times Lit. Suppl. 19 Feb. 128/2 The Dano-German Münte.
1880Encycl. Brit. XIII. 252/2 The many feuds between the Irish clans in which the Dano-Irish shared. Ibid., During the independence of the Dano-Irish kingdom of Dublin. 1892J. Y. Sargent Gram. Dano-Norwegian Lang. p. vi, I have given..the Syntax of sentences simple and compound, so far as the Dano-Norwegian idiom differs from the English. 1911Encycl. Brit. XIX. 818/1 The close of 1899 and the beginning of 1900 were occupied by a discussion..as to the adoption of the landsmaal..in place of the rigsmaal or Dano-Norwegian. 1933Bloomfield Lang. iv. 59 The present-day standard languages [in Scandinavia] are Icelandic, Danish, Dano-Norwegian, Norwegian Landsmaal, and Swedish. Ibid. xxvii. 484 The Norwegians modified their standard Danish in the direction of Norwegian speech-forms. This Dano-Norwegian Riksmaal (‘national language’) became the native speech of the educated upper class. 1961L. F. Brosnahan Sounds of Lang. ix. 205 The Riksmål, which originated in the Dano-Norwegian speech of the educated population of the south-east. |