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Old Dutch
noun
- the Dutch language before c1100. : OD, OD., O.D.
Old Dutch
noun
- the Dutch language up to about 1100, derived from the Low Franconian dialect of Old Low German OD See also Franconian
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
“It’s gone all the way back to old Dutch days.”
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You walk around, you can still find old Dutch houses around.
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In Old Dutch there was "fader"; in Old Icelandic we find "faðir"; in Old High German, a precursor to modern German, it was "fater" – now "vater"; and, finally, in Old Danish, "fathær."
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Indeed, had the big reveal been "I am your fader" it would have made a nice play on the heavy-breathing villain's name with a nod to an old Dutch term for "father."
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Humpty Dumpty operates as a subsidiary of a company called Old Dutch Foods, a snack manufacturer that mainly distributes chips and pretzels across the Midwest, New England, and Canada.
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