Flemish
See also: flemish
English
Etymology
From Middle English flemmysshe, from Old Frisian flemsche, from Middle Dutch vlāmisch, vlemesch (modern Dutch Vlaams), from Old Frisian flamsk (“Fleming”) (compare West Frisian Flaamsk), from Proto-Germanic *flaumaz (“flowing, current (water)”) and *-iskaz. More at Flanders.
Adjective
Flemish (comparative more Flemish, superlative most Flemish)
- Of or relating to Flanders, either as the historical county of Flanders (the current provinces of West Flanders and East Flanders in Belgium, Zeelandic Flanders in the Netherlands and French Flanders); or as the Dutch-speaking region of Belgium.
- Of or relating to the Belgian standard variety of the Dutch language.
- Of or relating to West Flemish, East Flemish and/or French Flemish dialects of Dutch.
Derived terms
- Flemish accounts
- Flemish beauty
- Flemish bond
- Flemish brick
- Flemish coil
- Flemish eye
- Flemish horse
- Flemishness
Translations
of or relating to Flanders
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of or relating to the Flemish variety of the Dutch language
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Proper noun
Flemish
- Standard Dutch as it is spoken in Flanders.
- West Flemish, East Flemish and/or French Flemish dialects of Dutch.
Translations
the Dutch language as it is spoken in Flanders
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See also
Further reading
- ISO 639-3 code vls (SIL)
- Ethnologue entry for Dutch, nld
- Ethnologue entry for Flemish, vls
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