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walesiske

Walesiske is a Nordic and Scandinavian-language term used to refer to Wales, its people, or the Welsh language. In Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish contexts it functions as an adjective or demonym equivalent to the English word “Welsh,” used when describing things related to Wales or its inhabitants. The term is not a native Welsh designation; it is a foreign exonym that appears in non-English texts.

Etymology and scope: the word derives from the name Wales and its usage follows patterns common to

Usage and context: in modern reference works and encyclopedic writing within Nordic languages, walesiske appears primarily

See also: Wales; Welsh language; Cymraeg. This term is mainly of interest in linguistic, translation, or regional

exonyms
in
Nordic
languages.
The
Welsh
self-designations
differ:
the
language
is
called
Cymraeg
and
the
country
Cymru,
while
the
widely
used
English
exonym
is
Wales.
The
existence
of
walesiske
in
Nordic
languages
reflects
cross-cultural
linguistic
conventions
rather
than
Welsh
self-perception.
in
neutral
descriptions
of
Wales
or
Welsh
culture.
It
does
not
carry
political
status
or
official
recognition
within
Wales.
When
speaking
about
the
people
or
language
in
a
Welsh
context,
Nordic
writers
more
often
use
direct
equivalents
of
“Welsh”
or
the
native
terms
Cymraeg
and
Cymru.
studies
contexts
and
is
not
a
widely
used
term
in
English-language
representations
of
Wales.