Page:A Danish and Dano-Norwegian grammar.djvu/77

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NORWEGIAN SOUNDS.
63
ve dropped. ve retained.
fly(ve) or fly(v)e to flie, i fly(v)ende Fart in a flying hurry, paa flyende Flœkken (somewh. vulg.) right here on the spot. med flyvende Faner with banners flying, den flyvende Hollænder the flying Dutchman, en Flyvemaskine a flying machine, et Flyveblad a pamphlet.
gi(ve) to give, gi(v) mig det give it me, prtcp. givet pr. gir (in these abbreviated colloquial forms g is pronounced as j (see § 118, 2). der gives Folk som there are people who, anse noget for givet consider something as given, en given Störrelse a given quantity (in the unabridged forms g usually is pronounced as g).
ha(ve) to have, pres. written and pronounced jeg har, past tense spelt havde pron. hadde, prtc. havt pron hatt. havende having, passive haves or ha(v)es.
Hoved pron. hode head: et godt Hode a clever person, ondt i Hode(t) pains in the head, Hodepine, Hodeverk headache (always spelt Hovedpine etc.) Hoved chief: Hovedmanden the head, the leader, Hovedværk principal work.

QUANTITY.


141. Vowels are long 1) in monosyllables when ending the word; Ex.: gaa to go, Ko cow. (Nu now has long or short vowel according as it has the sentence stress or not: nu‘kommer jeg here I am, nu kom‘mer jeg I am coming now). 2) in the accented syllable of dissyllables and polysyllables when followed by a single consonant with following vowel: