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Shelby
Plader eller tallerkner?
When studying I came across two words for plates:
-Plader
-Tallerkner
Are they both correct? Do they mean the same thing?
If not examples would be very helpful.
Thanks!
Oct 1, 2015 9:00 PM
Answers · 3
5
"Tallerken" is what you eat your food from. It's a dinner plate.
"Plade" means 'plate' in other senses, like a metal plate or a tectonic plate. For example, a number plate (for a motor vehicle) is a "nummerplade". It can also refer to a music disc like a vinyl LP or a CD.
Examples:
"Man plejer at spiser mad fra en tallerken." (One usually eats food from a plate).
"De tektoniske plader bevæger sig i forskellige retninger." (The tectonic plates move in different directions.)
"Hun satte en plade på grammofonen" (She put a disc on the gramophone).
October 5, 2015
If you say "plader" then it will sound really akward.
Use tallerken (singularis) or tallerkner (pluralis)
October 4, 2015
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Shelby
Language Skills
Danish, English, Russian, Spanish
Learning Language
Danish, Russian
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