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Copenhagen English

Meaning Copenhagen meaning

What does Copenhagen mean?
Definitions in simple English

Copenhagen

Copenhagen is the capital city of Denmark.

Copenhagen

the capital and largest city of Denmark; located on the island of Zealand Copenhagen is sometimes called the Paris of the North

Synonyms Copenhagen synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as Copenhagen?

Copenhagen English » English

Kobenhavn Danish capital

Examples Copenhagen examples

How do I use Copenhagen in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Copenhagen is the capital of Denmark.
Copenhagen is a bike-friendly city.
There is a street in Copenhagen with a very strange name.
Copenhagen is Denmark's capital.

Movie subtitles

Sofren's two rivals to the post had faith in their handsome clothes and the fine learning that was crammed into them in Copenhagen.
When the two theologians from Copenhagen saw they could not reach their goal by words alone, they joined forces to invite everyone to a feast that evening.
Rome, Vienna, Copenhagen, Stockholm, then America.
Copenhagen's train arrive at 8, then they'll have dinner and they'll take Eugen's car.
Tomorrow we'll take the train from Copenhagen to Paris, and when we have no money left, we'll go to Italy.
I only ask. For example, who got us out of Copenhagen?
Think he'd already booked us to Stockholm and Copenhagen.
Flight BE 480 from Copenhagen has landed.
We're delighted to invite our passengers to spend the night in Copenhagen due to a problem with the motor.
Remember those two trips you made for us from Berlin. to Copenhagen and Helsinki?
Copenhagen, the second week in April. The 12th, I think.
Letters to the banks in Copenhagen and Helsinki. asking for a statement of any recent withdrawals by your two partners.
The Copenhagen letter.
Within a week we should at least know the dates. when Rolling Stone was last in Copenhagen and Helsinki to draw the money.
One of the Copenhagen Vases, eh?
Not one person in this village has ever been to Copenhagen, have they?
I never think about Copenhagen - do you?
What do you suppose Copenhagen is really like?
I used to think about Copenhagen a lot.
I used to think about Copenhagen a lot when I was your age.
What kind of stories did you make up about Copenhagen?
I used to dream about having the finest cobbler shop in Copenhagen.
Go to Copenhagen now. Right now.
You forgot about Copenhagen all these years.
No, some day I'm really going to Copenhagen.
Has anyone from this village gone to Copenhagen before?
You stay a little while and then come back, but you've been to Copenhagen.
If anyone had told me this morning that I'd decide to go to Copenhagen.
Some time later in Copenhagen.
I was in my dressing room. It was in the Opera House, in Copenhagen.
I'll write to Copenhagen for my birth certificate.
I'm going home to Copenhagen.
Oh Nadine, what was it you used to say in Copenhagen?
Everything else that we talk about, going to Copenhagen, or the sea.
Two in Hamburg, one in Rotterdam, two in Antwerp, one in Hull, one in Stockholm, one in Copenhagen, and three in the North Sea.
Then he'll be in Copenhagen when the novel comes out.
Let me know as soon as Tony is in Copenhagen.
And this is Miss Signe. my niece from Copenhagen.
It's just that I miss Copenhagen.
There is nothing in it except naked girls working in some bakery or something in Copenhagen.
Bakery in Copenhagen?

News and current affairs

COPENHAGEN - Public skepticism about global warming may be growing, but the scientific consensus is as solid as ever: man-made climate change is real, and we ignore it at our peril.
The enormous effort expended to bring the Protocol into force nonetheless indicates how much work will be required to produce the next treaty, due to be agreed in Copenhagen in December 2009.
New research that my colleagues and I undertook for the Copenhagen Consensus Center in Denmark explores the effectiveness of different responses to this global challenge, but it strongly supports the portfolio approach for several reasons.
The Copenhagen Consensus study also examined a portfolio option of the sort heralded by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
My think tank, the Copenhagen Consensus, is working with more than 60 top economists and several Nobel laureates to identify which targets promise the highest return on investment.
When examining the cost of conflict, the Copenhagen Consensus economists estimate the actual costs of global military expenditure.
COPENHAGEN - Despite gains in life expectancy, expanded access to education, and lower rates of poverty and hunger, the world has a long way to go to improve the quality of people's lives.
Calculations from the Copenhagen Consensus show that it could save almost three million lives each year if directed toward preventing malaria and tuberculosis, and increasing childhood immunization.
COPENHAGEN - Copenhagen, Denmark's capital, wants to be the world's first CO2-neutral city by 2025.
More surprisingly, Copenhagen's politicians have confidently declared that cutting CO2 now will ultimately make the city and its citizens wealthier, with today's expensive green-energy investments more than paying off when fossil-fuel prices rise.
The first challenge that Copenhagen faces in reaching its zero-emissions goal is the lack of cost-effective alternatives for some sources of CO2, particularly automobiles.
To address this problem, Copenhagen has had to devise an electricity-generation strategy that enables it sometimes to run on coal-fired power when necessary, without creating net emissions.
The city's plan is to build more than 100 wind turbines within the greater Copenhagen area and in the shallow waters around it.
COPENHAGEN - Striking the right balance between preventing global warming and adapting to its effects is one of the most important - and most vexing - policy questions of our age.
The task of remedying it must begin at the meeting on climate change that will be held in Copenhagen in December.
COPENHAGEN - Common sense was an early loser in the scorching battle over the reality of man-made global warming.
Almost inevitably, at international summits from Kyoto to Copenhagen, governments failed to take any meaningful action on global warming.
I gathered UN ambassadors from the US, China, India, Pakistan, Tanzania, Zambia, Russia, Egypt, Thailand and Vietnam in a project called Copenhagen Consensus.
Thailand's ambassador pointed out that using the Copenhagen Consensus prioritization framework could help the UN to ensure better, more effective utilization of scarce resources in tackling top issues.
Preparations for the climate change conference in Copenhagen are dominated by charges and recriminations.
COPENHAGEN - In 1950, people in South Korea and Pakistan earned roughly the same amount of money annually.
The Copenhagen Consensus Center, of which I am director, recently asked 60 teams of economists to evaluate the benefits and costs of these proposed targets, which will come into force to replace the Millennium Development Goals in September.
COPENHAGEN - At its heart, much of the debate over climate change deals with just one divisive and vexing question: How big should cuts in carbon emissions be?
Even the Copenhagen summit on climate change ended just the way China wanted: failure in its attempt to commit China, or any other industrial nation, to making significant cuts in carbon emissions, with the United States getting the blame.
This year, a new global climate agreement will be negotiated in Copenhagen to replace the Kyoto Protocol.
But we must understand that Copenhagen is also a big chance to revive the global economy.
All of the relevant powers of the twenty-first century are represented in the G-20, and they should see the success of Copenhagen as part of their direct responsibility.
In six months, a deal is supposed to be struck in Copenhagen, so the MEF meeting comes at a vital moment.
The important thing for Copenhagen is that decisions are taken now for investments that will yield benefits later.
By making these commitments, the MEF leaders, whose countries account for more than three-quarters of global emissions, would lay a firm foundation for success in Copenhagen.
Between L'Aquila and Copenhagen, there will undoubtedly be difficult discussions over interim targets for developed countries.

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