See also: dått

Faroese

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Verb

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datt

  1. first/third-person singular past of detta

Icelandic

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Verb

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datt

  1. first/third-person singular past indicative of detta

Luxembourgish

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Alternative forms

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  • daß (rare)
  • dass (see etymology and usage note)

Etymology

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From Middle High German dat, from Old High German that, north-western variant of thaz, from Proto-Germanic *þat. Cognate with Central Franconian datt, German dass, Dutch dat, English that.

The split between Luxembourgish dat (pronoun) and datt (conjunction) is due to the fact that the latter is virtually never stressed, which prevented the otherwise regular lengthening (note that dat may also be pronounced with a short vowel in unstressed position). The byform dass does not directly continue Old High German thaz, but is actually from datt + s (2nd person singular ending), thus from a contraction datt s dedass de (that you). Compare wann s de (if you), etc., and compare for the contraction has (you had) from underlying *haats. The subsequent generalisation of dass, however, was surely reinforced by the form dass in Standard German and in dialects to the south-east of Luxembourg.

Pronunciation

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Conjunction

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datt

  1. that
    Mir sinn trauereg, datt eis Vakanz fäerdeg ass.
    We are sad that our holiday is over.

Usage notes

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  • The forms datt and dass are roughly equally common, now perhaps even with a slight predominance of the latter. The form datt is still felt as the more traditional Luxembourgish form, however, and is therefore prevalent in publications.

Norwegian Bokmål

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Verb

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datt

  1. past tense of dette

Norwegian Nynorsk

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Verb

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datt

  1. past tense of detta

Pennsylvania German

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Etymology

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Compare German da.

Adverb

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datt

  1. Alternative form of dart (there).
    • 2010, Earl C Haag, Pennsylvania German Reader and Grammar, page 86:
      Was mache denn die Nochbere datt driwwe?
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    • 2011, Peter Fritsch, Pennsylvania Dutch Halloween Scherenschnitte, page 62:
      [] datt drunne im Langschwammer Busch.
      [] over there in the Langschwammer Forest.

Swedish

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Noun

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datt c

  1. Only used in ditt och datt (this and that)

Declension

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References

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