Hô-lân-lâng

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Hô-lân-lâng
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O-lân-lâng he̍k-chiá Hô-lân-lâng (O-lân-gí: Nederlanders; ì-sù: Kē-tē-lâng) sī Kē-tē-kok chhut-sin ia̍h sī hiat-thóng ê jîn-bîn, bîn-cho̍k siōng in sī German-lâng chi it. O-lân-lâng tī thong sè-kài ū tāi-iok 2900 bān jîn-kháu, tû-liáu tī Kē-tē-kok ū tāi-iok 1500 bān lâng, mā tī in hái-gōa ê Lâm-hui-kok ū 700 bān, tī Bí-kok ū 500 bān chó-iū ê O-lân-hē jîn-kháu.

More information Chóng Jîn-kháu, Hun-pò͘ Tē-khu ...

O-lân-hē jîn-bîn koh tĪ Ìn-nî ū 40-thóng bān chó-iū, in sī cho-sêng tong-tē Indo-lâng ê chòe-chú-iàu pō͘-hūn. Lēng-gōa tī Suriname, Curaçao, Pa-se kap Canada téng tē, in mā sī chin ū hoat-tián ê chió-sò͘ cho̍k-kûn,

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Tsù-sik

  1. Limburgish, a Low Franconian variety in close proximity to both Dutch and German, spoken in southeastern Netherlands is used by people who ethnically identify as Dutch or Flemings and regionally as "Limburgers" despite perceived linguistic differences.
  2. West Frisian is spoken by the ethnic Frisians, who may or may not also identify as "Dutch".

Tsù-kái

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