DE, de, or dE may refer to:

Human names

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Language and linguistics

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  • De (Cyrillic) (Д, д), a letter in the Cyrillic script
  • German language (ISO 639-1 alpha-2 code)
  • De (kana) (で, デ), a Japanese hiragana/katakana
  • de (interjection), Albanian interjection
  • de-, an English prefix denoting reversal, undoing, removing; intensifying; or from, off
  • Downward entailing, in linguistic semantics, a property of a modifier that reduces the number or degree an expression

Media and business

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Military

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Places

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  • Dé, Mali, a commune and town in Mali
  • De River, Mizoram, India
  • DE, abbreviation for the U.S. State of Delaware, used by the United States Postal Service and others
  • DE postcode area, for Derby and surrounding areas of England
  • Germany (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code)
    • .de, the ccTLD for Germany

Science, technology, and mathematics

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Other uses

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See also

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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

More, re, and bre

More, re, and bre (with many variants) are interjections and/or vocative particles common to Albanian, Greek, Romanian, South Slavic (Bulgarian, Serbian

Eh

/ˈɛ/) is a spoken interjection used in many varieties of English. The oldest Oxford English Dictionary defines eh as "an interjectional interrogative particle

Che (interjection)

Spanish: [tʃe]; Portuguese: tchê [tʃe]; Valencian: xe [tʃe]) is an interjection commonly used in Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, Paraguay, Brazil (São Paulo

Olé

¡Ole! or ¡olé! is a Spanish interjection used to cheer on or praise a performance, especially associated with the audience of bullfighting and flamenco

Órale

Órale is a common interjection in Mexican Spanish slang. It is also commonly used in the United States as an exclamation expressing approval or encouragement

OK

as an adverb ("Wow, you did OK for your first time skiing!"). As an interjection, it can denote compliance ("OK, I will do that"), or agreement ("OK,

Fuck

and fucking) are used as a noun, a verb, an adjective, an infix, an interjection, or an adverb. There are many common phrases that employ the word as

Oyez

beginning) is a traditional interjection said two or three times in succession to introduce the opening of a court of law. The interjection was also traditionally