kryds
See also: kryds'
Danish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /krys/, [ˈkʰʁ̥ys]
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Middle Low German krūze, krūce, from Old Saxon krūci, from Latin crux. Compare also German Kreuz, Dutch kruis, with diphthongs going back to a long vowel, which points to a late borrowing (with a medieval pronunciation of the Latin word). English cross, with a short open vowel, is derived independently from Old Irish cros, from a Vulgar Latin pronunciation with /o/ from short u. Doublet of kors (“(Christian) cross”).
Noun
kryds n (singular definite krydset, plural indefinite kryds or krydser)
- cross (two crossing lines)
- crossroads, intersection (crossing roads)
- (zoology) croup (the part of an animal's body around the sacrum, the upper part of the hind legs)
- (anatomy) loin (the back of a human around the sacrum)
- (music) sharp (a note one semitone higher, ♯)
- (slang) crossword (Clipping of krydsogtværs)
- (rare) cruise
Declension
References
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
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