"Keuken" is a Dutch equivalent of "kitchen."The Dutch word also may refer to the expected food and cooking activities that go on in a kitchen. So it may be used loosely to refer to "food," "cooking" and "cookery." But whatever the activity, Dutch food has many interesting high points, among them the use of the country's cheeses as an appetizer, dessert or ingredient in a main dish.
The medical abbreviation NGT stands for Nasogastric Tube, which is a flexible tube inserted through the nose and into the stomach for feeding or medication administration. The abbreviation "to LIS" is less common but could potentially refer to "to left iliac spine," indicating the placement of the NGT tube towards the left side of the abdomen near the iliac spine.
You refer to people who live in Holland as Dutch :)
Small bore ngt (Nasogastric tube) is a tube inserted through the nostril (nare) that is flexible and soft (8 French-12 French diameter) used for feedings, and kept in place longer than a large bore ngt. Large bore ngt (Nasogastric tube) is a tube inserted through the nostril (nare) that is less flexible and more firm (14 French diameter or larger) used for feedings, to give medications, and for gastric decompression. It is kept in place for a shorter period than a small bore ngt.
You would refer to them as the 'Dutch'.
NGT means Neutral Grounding Transformer. It is Connected between TRF star point and earth point. It is protect the trf from short ckt .
No they play ps3
"Souse" or "Jellied pig's feet" may be English equivalents of the Pennsylvania Dutch word "Gallerich."Specifically, the English and the Pennsylvania Dutch words refer to a dish that may be served sour or sweet. In Pennsylvania Dutch culture, souring is done by adding vinegar and sweetening with cinnamon and cloves. Otherwise, the basic Pennsylvania Dutch recipe calls for boiling pig's feet and tongue and serving seasoned with pepper and salt.
Dutch (by the English) Nederlander by themselves
A dutch oven can refer to a number of different types of pots and kettles. Historians believe the name derives from the methods of casting the cookware that has Dutch origins.
There is no actual coin called a "Dutch Nickel." It may refer to a nickel coin from the Netherlands, which is worth five cents in Euros. Alternatively, it could be a colloquial term or a mistranslation.
Dutch people or in the language that they speak over there (Dutch) Nederlanders