World Language Resources
World Language Resources

Newly Available! WINDOWS 7 in Popular Languages!
ESL Lessons Promotion!

Windows 7
Super Bargains
$1 Clearance Items!!!
Computers / Notebooks
Correzione Ortografica
Corsi "Tutorial"
Corsi "Tutorial" - Classi/Scuole
Dizionari
ESL - Inglese come Seconda Lingua
Giochi
Intrattenimento Video/Film
Keyboard Stickers
Libri per l'infanzia
Microsoft Office
Microsoft Windows
Per Ragazzi
Prodotti Di Piccole Dimensioni
Software - Windows
Software - Mac
Tastiere
Traduzione
Viaggi
Videoscrittura
Ancora...Ancora...
Frisone (Frisiano)
Software - Windows
FineReader OCR 7.0 Pro
FineReader-OCR-7-0-Pro-AbkhazFineReader-Abkhazo-AdyghianFineReader-AfrikaansFineReader-104256 Special Price
$449.95

Regular Price
$495.00

Add to CartBuy Product InfoInfo

ABBYY FineReader 7.0 Professional Edition is the ideal optical character recognition (OCR) application for users who demand the highest level of recognition accuracy and format retention. An excellent time-saving solution,...
Prodotti  Introduzione  Campione di scrittura  Traduzione 

Prodotti




Introduzione


Frisian is spoken in northern Holland, mainly in the Netherlands, in the northermost province of Friesland (capital: Leeuwarden), which includes the outlying West Frisian Islands. There are about 300,000 speakers here, who are generally referred to as West Frisians. There are also about 10,000 speakers, known as North Frisians, in Germany, in the northermost province of Schleswig-Holstein, which borders Denmark, and on the adjacent North Frisian Islands to the west.

Frisian is a Germanic language, closer to English than Dutch in some respects. Courses in Frisian are offered at a number of Dutch universities.


Frisone (Frisiano) è parlato/usato nei seguenti paesi:
Germania, Paesi Bassi (Olanda).

Language Family
Family: Indo-European
Subgroup: Germanic
Branch: Western


Copyright: Kenneth Katzner, Le Lingue del Mondo, Edito da Routledge.


Campione di scrittura




Traduzione


It stands to reason that the Frisian contribution to American literature is a very modest one. There are really only three or four Frisian names that have come to the fore in the American literary world. They are names of Frisian immigrants who are still living, a proof of the fact that literary art among the Frisian immigrants did not come to early fruition. Perhaps, however, it is not without significance or promise that the name which in point of time comes last is also the most noted.