Danish

edit

Etymology

edit

A merger of two words: 1. Old Norse dáligr, derived from  n (coma), from Proto-Germanic *dawą, related to *dawjaną (die); and 2. Middle Low German dōrlik (foolish), derived from dōre (fool), from Proto-Germanic *dauzô, cognate with German Tor (cf. also Danish dåre).

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

dårlig (neuter dårligt, plural and definite singular attributive dårlige, comparative værre or dårligere, superlative (predicative) værst or dårligst, superlative (attributive) værste or dårligste)

  1. bad, unwell, poor

Derived terms

edit

Adverb

edit

dårlig (comparative dårligere, superlative dårligst)

  1. Alternative form of dårligt

Usage notes

edit

Further reading

edit

Norwegian Bokmål

edit

Etymology

edit

From Danish dårlig.

Adjective

edit

dårlig (neuter singular dårlig, definite singular and plural dårlige, comparative dårligere, indefinite superlative dårligst, definite superlative dårligste)

  1. bad, unwell, poor, of poor quality

Adverb

edit

dårlig (comparative dårligere, superlative dårligst)

  1. badly, poorly

References

edit