[ˈkʰaɐ̯nə]
OprindelseFrom Old Norse kjarni (“core”), from Proto-Germanic *kernô (“core, kernel”), cognate with Swedish kärna and German Kern.
- common-gendercore, central thing
“Man kan imidlertid ikke forvente, at patienten på egen hånd formår at indkredse og fortælle om kernen i sine vanskeligheder. Ofte vil patienten snarere udleve, gentage og i en vis forstand demonstrere” — However, one cannot expect that the patient is, on her own, able to specify and speak of the core of her difficulties. Rather, the patient will often live, repeat and in a sense demonstrate, what the
“Kernen i vores arbejde er ikke - som man måske kunne tro - indsamlingen af store mængder data og besværlige analyser. Kernen i kvalitetsudvikling er tværtimod^([sic]) udviklingen af en kultur, hvor de” — The core of our work is not - as one might think - the collection of great amounts of data and difficult analyses. On the contrary,^([sic]) the core in quality development is the development of a cult
- common-genderseed
“Lars foretrak appelsiner uden kerner, da han hadede at skulle frasortere kernerne.” — Lars preferred oranges without seeds, as he hated to have to sort out the seeds.
Formerkernen(definite, singular) · kerner(indefinite, plural) · kerne(indefinite, nominative, singular) · kernen(definite, nominative, singular) · kerner(indefinite, nominative, plural) · kernerne(definite, nominative, plural) · kernes(genitive, indefinite, singular) · kernens(definite, genitive, singular) · kerners(genitive, indefinite, plural) · kernernes(definite, genitive, plural)
Kilde: Wiktionary