I am a Netherllander (Nederlander) and to me, calling me dutch, is like calling a black person a N----
I think the word Dutch , is a German, Deutch???
The word "Dutch" comes from the Middle English word "Duche," which is derived from the Middle Low German word "Dütsch" or "Dietsch." It initially referred to the people, language, and culture of the region now known as the Netherlands.
The word "walrus" comes from Dutch and Scandinavian languages. In Dutch, it is "walrus" and in Scandinavian languages, it is "hvalros" (Norwegian and Danish) or "hvalross" (Swedish).
The word "iceberg" is believed to have originated from the Dutch word "ijsberg," meaning "ice mountain."
The word "cookie" comes from the Dutch word "koekie" which means small cake.
The origin of the word "sloop" is uncertain, but it is believed to have come from the Dutch word "sloep." Sloops were originally small, single-masted sailing vessels frequently used by the Dutch in the 17th century.
The word "slaw" is a shortened form of the word "coleslaw," which comes from the Dutch word "koolsla," where "kool" means cabbage and "sla" means salad. The term "coleslaw" has been used since the 18th century in English to refer to a salad made primarily of shredded cabbage.
The word is derived from the Dutch word schipper; schip is Dutch for "ship".
Eponymy is the derivation of a word from a name.
from the dutch
It is a dutch word.
The derivation of "factor" is from Latin, through French and Middle English.
kom hier is the word for come here. This is the word representing come here.
the word sloop originally comes from the dutch word "sloep" so therefore the word is dutch
Dutch
Tomahawk is a derivation of a Powhatan (Virginia Algonquian) word. The word is 'tamahaac' and is pronounced in much the same way as the English word.
The word derivative is a derivation of the root word derive. You may make a derivation of my original artwork under the creative commons license.
It came from Dutch
dutch