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Disse

Disse is a demonstrative determiner and pronoun used in Danish and Norwegian to mean "these." It accompanies plural nouns or can stand alone as a pronoun, referring to multiple items that are near in space, time, or context relative to the speaker. In Danish, it is commonly seen as disse bøger (these books) or disse er mine (these are mine). In Norwegian Bokmål, similar usage applies: disse bøkene (these books) or disse er mine.

Usage and grammar development typically position disse as the plural form of the demonstratives that include

Etymology and cognates suggest disse shares roots with other Germanic languages. It is closely related to the

Related terms include the singular forms dette and denne (Danish) or dette/denne (Norwegian), and the corresponding

this
and
those.
It
contrasts
with
singular
forms
such
as
dette/denne
in
Danish
and
Norwegian,
which
correspond
to
"this."
The
word
may
function
within
noun
phrases
or
serve
as
a
predicative
pronoun
when
the
noun
is
omitted
or
understood
from
context.
English
word
these
and
the
German
dieses,
both
derived
from
Proto-Germanic
demonstratives.
Cross-language
variation
exists:
Norwegian
nynorsk
often
uses
desse
in
certain
dialects,
while
Danish
consistently
uses
disse;
Swedish
uses
Dessa
for
"these."
The
distinction
among
these
forms
reflects
historical
developments
in
the
Scandinavian
languages
and
their
alignment
with
gendered
and
plural
noun
phrases.
Swedish
forms
dessa
and
dessa/denne.
Disse
is
a
common,
everyday
element
of
Scandinavian
demonstratives
and
a
key
part
of
referencing
multiple
items
in
near
proximity.