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→‎Pronunciation: Common and also pretty much what the audio says.
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===Pronunciation===
===Pronunciation===
* {{IPA|/dɔʁt/|[dɔʁt]|[dɔɐ̯t]|lang=de}}
* {{IPA|/dɔrt/|[dɔʁt]|[dɔɐ̯t]|[dɔːt]|lang=de}}
* {{audio|De-dort.ogg|audio|lang=de}}
* {{audio|De-dort.ogg|audio|lang=de}}



Revision as of 21:38, 1 August 2018

See also: Dort and dört

English

Etymology

From Middle English dort (found in compound cankerdort), of unknown origin.

Pronunciation

Noun

dort (plural dorts)

  1. (UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A sulky or sullen mood; the sulks.

Usage notes

  • Usually used in the plural, the dorts.

Derived terms

Verb

dort (third-person singular simple present dorts, present participle dorting, simple past and past participle dorted)

  1. (intransitive) To become pettish; sulk.

Anagrams


Czech

Etymology

German Torte

Pronunciation

Noun

Lua error in Module:cs-headword at line 144: Unrecognized gender: 'm'

  1. cake

Declension

Template:cs-decl-noun

Derived terms

Further reading


French

Pronunciation

Verb

dort

  1. (deprecated use of |lang= parameter) third-person singular present indicative of dormir

Anagrams


German

Alternative forms

  • dorten (dialectal or poetic; overall very rare)

Etymology

From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Old High German doret.

Pronunciation

Adverb

dort

  1. there, yonder

Usage notes

  • Dort is seldom ever heard in non-formal speech in some regions of Germany, chiefly the west and north. The synonym da is overall more frequent, although dort is quite common in eastern Germany, southern Germany, and Austria.
  • In literary German, dort is usual in all regions.

Synonyms

Further reading

  • dort” in Duden online