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granskes

Granskes is a present passive form of the verb granske in several Scandinavian languages, notably Norwegian and Danish. It means that something is being examined, scrutinized, or investigated by someone else. The active form of the verb is gransker.

In usage, granskes signals that an entity such as a report, document, procedure, or policy is under

Cross-linguistic notes: in Norwegian, the form granskes is common; Danish also uses granskes in similar contexts.

Etymology and related forms: granskes derives from granske, meaning to examine or investigate. Related words include

See also: granska, granskning, gransket, granskas. Note that exact usage and spelling can vary by language and

external
review.
The
agent
performing
the
examination
is
often
unspecified
or
introduced
by
a
preposition
phrase,
for
example
av
en
uavhengig
komité
(by
an
independent
committee).
The
noun
granskning
refers
to
the
act
of
scrutiny
or
audit,
while
the
related
adjective
or
past
participles
describe
the
state
of
what
has
been
examined.
In
Swedish,
the
corresponding
present
passive
form
is
granskas.
The
term
reflects
a
shared
Germanic
heritage
and
is
commonly
encountered
in
journalism,
law,
auditing,
and
policy
reviews.
granskning
(a
thorough
review)
and
granskad/granskade
(examined).
These
terms
connote
thoroughness
and
formal
scrutiny,
often
with
implications
for
credibility,
accountability,
or
decision-making.
regional
standard.