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Dutch? Danish? They do both start with D...

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DUTCH:

DANISH:

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A For the Record item in Tuesday’s Times sounded familiar to newsroom library director Cary Schneider.

The correction, on the Op-Ed page, read:

Free speech: A March 9 Op-Ed about the erosion of free-speech protections referred to a controversy over 2005 cartoons that satirized the prophet Muhammad. Those cartoons were Danish, not Dutch.

That prompted him to do what any curious researcher might: He looked up previous instances of Danish/Dutch confusion.

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He found an unfortunate trend:

For the Record, Feb. 23, 2011 ‘Anna Nicole’ review: In a review of the new opera ‘Anna Nicole’ in the Feb. 19 Calendar section, soprano Eva-Maria Westbroek, who sang Anna, was described as Danish. She is Dutch.

For the Record, Sept. 25, 2010

Kay Bojesen: A Sept. 11 brief on the new L.A. store Mine cited a 1950s-era wooden monkey by Dutch designer Kay Bojesen. Bojesen was Danish, not Dutch.

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For the Record, Nov. 19, 2009

Viggo Mortensen: An article in Wednesday’s Envelope on actor Viggo Mortensen said he is from Dutch parentage. Mortensen is from Danish parentage.

For the Record, Sept. 2, 2009

Flying Pigeon: An article in Tuesday’s Business section about the Flying Pigeon LA bicycle shop, which sells Chinese and Dutch bikes, was accompanied by a box labeled ‘At a glance’ that incorrectly described the Dutch bikes as Danish.

For the Record, Dec. 2, 2006:

The pope in Turkey: An article in Thursday’s Section A about Pope Benedict XVI’s plea for Christian unity misidentified as Dutch the controversial newspaper cartoons satirizing the prophet Muhammad. They were originally published in Denmark.

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For the Record, Oct. 9, 2006:

Karen Blixen: An item in the Screening Room column in Thursday’s Calendar Weekend about the L.A. premiere of the documentary ‘Karen Blixen, Out of This World’ referred to Blixen as a Dutch writer. She was Danish.

Assistant Managing Editor Henry Fuhrmann, who supervises The Times’ copy editors, was chagrined by the repeated error.

‘One aspect of good editing is what I think of as pattern recognition: knowing the quirks of a particular writer, the nuances of a certain subject, the grammatical and factual errors that come up time and time again,’ Fuhrmann said. ‘Here, though, the pattern defies explanation.’

‘Errors of this sort are always a good reminder that we can be more diligent,’ he said. ‘We truly have nothing against the Danes (or the Dutch).’

-- Deirdre Edgar

Dutch photos: At left, a canal in Amsterdam, Netherlands. At right, wooden shoes on sale for tourists. Credits: Los Angeles Times

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Danish photos: At left, a neighborhood in Copenhagen, Denmark. Credit: Bloomberg. At right: Danish modern furniture. Credit: Los Angeles Times

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