Bokmål

Etymology
Borrowed from. The equivalent 🇨🇬 was used in this sense as a name for Latin, as it was the primary language used for writing of biblical work in much of the Middle Ages. The modern Icelandic name for Norwegian Bokmål is. When dialect research in western Norway was pioneered by in the 1850s,  took on the meaning of written standard language, as opposed to spoken dialects and Aasen's synthesized. The two Norwegian languages, standardized in 1907, changed names in 1929 from to, and from  to.

Proper noun

 * 1) One of the two major written standards of Norwegian, literally meaning “book language”.

Translations

 * Armenian: բուկմոլ
 * Catalan: bokmål
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 巴克摩挪威語,
 * Danish:
 * Dhivehi: ބޯކިމާލު
 * Dutch:
 * Faroese:
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Galician: bokmål
 * Georgian: ბუკმოლი
 * German: ,
 * Icelandic:
 * Irish: Bocmál
 * Japanese:
 * Korean: ^보크몰, ^복말
 * Latvian: būkmols
 * Northern Sami: girjedárogiella
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål:
 * Nynorsk: bokmål
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: bokmal
 * Russian:
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:

Etymology
.

Proper noun

 * 1) Bokmål