The Dutch reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Dutch

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The word Dutch when used alone, has several possible meanings in the English language. Most, if not all, of these meanings are in reference to the European country The Netherlands, its people or culture.

The term "Dutch", when used by itself can refer to:

"Dutch" is often confused with "Deutsch", the German word for German. English "Dutch", German "Deutsch", and Dutch "Dietsch" are actually variations of the same word. In English, "Dutch" used to be a generic term to refer to Netherlanders and Germans alike. This is why the German immigrants to Pennsylvania are also called the Pennsylvania Dutch. Today, the English word only refers to the Netherlands.

Because "Dutch" is disliked by some inhabitants of the Netherlands, the term is sometimes replaced by Netherlandic of identical meaning. The term "Netherlandic" when used as a noun typically refers to the Dutch language. When used as an adjective, the term refers to the people or culture of the Netherlands

The label "Dutch" is found in a number of terms and expressions:

Several of these are derogatory terms which have traditionally been explained as resulting from the 17th-century Anglo-Dutch Wars, but are now understood to have originated earlier.

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