Search Results for: Preserved cherries but unsuitable in that state for immediate consumption
of jorvik. several other english words derive from old east norse, for example "knife" ( kniv ), "husband" ( husbond ), and "egg" ( æg ). the suffix "-by" for 'town' is common in place names in yorkshire and the east midlands, for example selby, whitby, derby, and grimsby. the word "dale" meaning valley
the stops, rather the distinction is one of aspiration and fortis vs. lenis. [ ] /p t k/ are aspirated in onset realized as [b̥h, d̥s, ɡ̊h], but not in coda. the pronunciation of t, [d̥s], is in between a simple aspirated [d̥h] and a fully affricated [d̥s] as has happened in german with many words that...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_language