dager

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See also: Dager, and dǎgér

Cornish

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Cornish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia kw

Pronunciation

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Noun

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dager m (plural dagrow or daggrow)

  1. tear (drop of liquid produced by the eye)
  2. drop (small quantity of liquid)

References

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  1. ^ Ken George, editor (2009), “dager”, in An Gerlyver Meur: Cornish-English; English-Cornish Dictionary, Kesva an Taves Kernewek, →ISBN, page 123

Norwegian Bokmål

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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dager m

  1. indefinite plural of dag

Swedish

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Etymology

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From old nominative of dag (day). Compare Old Norse dagr, Faroese dagur, Icelandic dagur.

Noun

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dager c

  1. daylight
    Synonym: (more common) dagsljus
    • (Can we date this quote?), traditional (lyrics and music), “Staffan var en stalledräng (Staffansvisan) [Stephen was a stable hand (The Stephen song / Song of Stephen)]”‎[1]:
      [archaic language overall] Staffan var en stalledräng [stalldräng]. Vi tackom [tackar – obsolete first-person plural] nu så gärna. Han vattna' [vattnade] sina fålar fem, allt [perhaps a filler – compare Dutch al] för den ljusa stjärna. Ingen dager synes än. Stjärnorna på himmelen de blänka [plural verb form, now blänker].
      Stephen was a stable hand. We now give thanks so gladly. He watered his five horses, before the bright star. No daylight is visible yet. The stars in the sky [they] are gleaming.
  2. (figuratively) light (appearance)
    framställa någon i dålig dager
    portray someone in a bad light

Declension

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References

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