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EuroLex/E/Trash

From Wikiversity

trash

  • Original language: English
  • Original form and meaning: n. +6 'a style of music'


(Note: If the status is not specifically indicated then the word is stylistically neutral and generally used; if earlier meaning and status equals current use the former may be expressed by writing "dito". Cf. also the project guidelines.)


Language Form Date of Borrowing (and Obsolescence) Current Meaning and Status Earlier Meanings and Statusses Source
Catalan ... ... '...' '...' ...
Croatian ... ... status: word is known mainly to bilinguals and felt to be English '...' ...
Czech ... ... '...' '...' ...
Danish ... ... '...' '...' ...
Dutch trash [= English] 1990s the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: youth, modern; dito ...
English ... ... '...' '...' ...
Estonian ... ... '...' '...' ...
Finnish trash [= English] 1990s the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: youth, modern; dito ...
French ... ... '...' '...' ...
Frisian ... ... '...' '...' ...
German trash [= English] 1990s the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: youth, modern; dito ...
Hungarian ... ... '...' '...' ...
Irish ... ... '...' '...' ...
Italian ... ... '...' '...' ...
Latvian ... ... '...' '...' ...
Lithuanian ... ... '...' '...' ...
Maltese ... ... '...' '...' ...
Norwegian thrash/trash [= English] 1980s the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: technical; dito ...
Polish trash [tre∫] uninfluenced, end20c the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: youth, modern; dito ...
Portuguese ... ... '...' '...' ...
Rumantsch ... ... '...' '...' ...
Slovak ... ... '...' '...' ...
Slovenian ... ... '...' '...' ...
Spanish trash [= English] end20c the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: youth, modern; dito ...
Swedish ... ... '...' '...' ...
  • Annotations: * DEA = Dictionary of European Anglicisms by Manfred Görlach (2001), Oxford: OUP.; ** CODEE = The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology by T.F. Hoad (1986), Oxford: Clarendon.
  • Information on Other Languages: Russian: trésh, 1990s, meaning: the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: youth, modern; Bulgarian: trash, end20c, meaning: the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: youth, modern/technical; Greek: trash, 1990s, meaning: the same as in English, see above, status: restricted use: technical, youth, modern;,