Reference LGR for language: Danish (da) | lgr-second-level-danish-language-24jan24-en |
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This document is mechanically formatted from the above XML file for the LGR. It provides additional summary data and explanatory text. The XML file remains the sole normative specification of the LGR.
Date | 2024-01-24 |
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LGR Version | 3 (Second Level Reference LGR) |
Language | da (Danish Language) |
Unicode Version | 11.0.0 |
Description
INSTRUCTIONS
- These instructions cover how to adopt an LGR based on this reference LGR for a given zone and how to prepare the file for deposit in the IANA Repository of IDN Practices.
- As described the IANA procedure
(https://www.iana.org/help/idn-repository-procedure)
an LGR MUST contain the following elements in its header:- Script or Language Designator (see below for guidance)
- Version Number (this must increase with each amendment to the LGR, even if the updates are limited to the header itself)
- Effective Date (the date at which the policy becomes applicable in operational use)
- Registry Contact Details (contact name, email address, and/or phone number)
- The following information is optional:
- Document creation date
- Applicable Domain(s)
- Changes made to the Reference LGR before adopting
Please add or modify the following items in the XML source code for this file before
depositing the document in the IANA Repository.
(https://www.iana.org/domains/idn-tables)
Meta Data
Note: version numbers start at 1. RFC 7940 recommends using simple integers. The version comment is optional, please replace or delete the default comment. Version comments may be used by some tools as part of the page header.
<version comment="
[Please replace (or delete) the optional comment]">
[Please fill in version number, starting at 1]</version>
<date>
[Please fill in with publication date, in YYYY-MM-DD format]</date>
<validity-start>
[Please fill in effective date, in YYYY-MM-DD format]</validity-start>
Note: the scope element may be repeated, so that the same document can serve for multiple domains.
<scope type="domain">
[Please provide, in ".domain" format]</scope>
Registry Contact Information:
Please fill in the Registry Contact Details.
Change History
If you made technical modifications to the LGR, please summarize them in the Change History (and also note the details in the appropriate section of the description).
PLEASE DELETE THESE INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE DEPOSITING THE DOCUMENT
Registry Contact Details
- Contact Name: [Please fill in Contact Name]
- Email address: [Please fill in Email address]
- Phone Number: [Please fill in optional Phone Number]
Label Generation Rules for Danish
Overview
This document specifies a set of Label Generation Rules (LGR) for the Danish language using a language-specific repertoire for the second level domain or domains identified above. The format of this file follows [RFC 7940]. This LGR is adapted from the “Reference LGR for the Second Level for the Danish Language” [Ref-LGR-da-Latn], for details, see Change History below.
Standalone LGR: This LGR is designed to be used in a zone that does not cater to IDNs other than those valid under this LGR. This LGR lacks features that would allow its use in the context of another LGR in the same zone, and it may contain other features incompatible with such use.
Repertoire
Most references converge on 31 (29 + 2) Latin code points. In addition to the 29 letters of the alphabet proper, these include two letter used as part of the proper spelling of certain words: U+00E9 é LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE and U+00FC ü LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS. Both occur in spelling dictionaries and especially the former is used in many ordinary words. The repertoire here adds U+00E4 ä LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS and U+00F6 ö LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS, both of which are used in neighboring Sweden and Germany. Finally, the use of all three code points with diaresis, alone or together with code points from the core Danish alphabet such as U+00F8 ø LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH STROKE is not uncommon in family names. All three are available on Danish keyboards.
There is no IDN table published in the IANA Repository of IDN Practices by .dk ccTLD, but the registry provides IDN information [700].
Excluded code points
Letters documented in some references but not included:
U+00DF ß LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S
U+00E0 à LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH GRAVE
U+00E1 á LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH ACUTE
U+00E2 â LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CIRCUMFLEX
U+01FB ǻ LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE AND ACUTE
U+00E7 ç LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA
U+00E8 è LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH GRAVE
U+00EA ê LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH CIRCUMFLEX
U+00EB ë LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH DIAERESIS
U+00ED í LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH ACUTE
U+00EE î LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH CIRCUMFLEX
U+00EF ï LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH DIAERESIS
U+00F0 ð LATIN SMALL LETTER ETH
U+00F1 ñ LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH TILDE
U+00F3 ó LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH ACUTE
U+00F4 ô LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH CIRCUMFLEX
U+00F9 ù LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH GRAVE
U+00FA ú LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH ACUTE
U+00FB û LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH CIRCUMFLEX
U+00FD ý LATIN SMALL LETTER Y WITH ACUTE
U+00FE þ LATIN SMALL LETTER THORN
U+00FF ÿ LATIN SMALL LETTER Y WITH DIAERESIS
U+0153 œ LATIN SMALL LIGATURE OE
U+01FD ǽ LATIN SMALL LETTER AE WITH ACUTE
U+01FF ǿ LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH STROKE AND ACUTE
The above list includes code points for languages like Faroese, which are written in territories associated with the country of Denmark, but that are not part of the Danish language.
Also excluded is U+00DF ß which is used in German, a minority language in Denmark. While it is supported in existing IDN practice [700], to correctly address it would require mitigating the complication from use of “ss” as a common fallback. See the discussion of “fallback variants” in Second Level Reference Label Generation Ruleset for German (de) [Ref-LGR-de].
Extended code points
None.
Variants
No variants are applicable when using the LGR in a standalone fashion.
Character Classes
This LGR does not define named character classes.
Rules
Common Rules
By default, the LGR includes the rules and actions to implement the following restrictions mandated by the IDNA protocol. They are marked with ⍟.
- Hyphen Restrictions — restrictions on the allowable placement of hyphens (no leading/ending hyphen and no hyphen in positions 3 and 4). These restrictions are described in Section 4.2.3.1 of RFC 5891 [150]. They are implemented here as context rule on U+002D (-) HYPHEN-MINUS.
- Leading Combining Marks — restrictions on the allowable placement of combining marks (no leading combining mark). This rule is described in Section 4.2.3.2 of RFC 5891 [150].
Actions
This LGR includes the default actions for LGRs as well as the action needed to invalidate labels with misplaced combining marks. They are marked with ⍟. For a description see [RFC 7940].
Methodology and Contributors
The LGR in this document has been adapted from the corresponding Reference LGR for the Second Level. The Second Level Reference LGR for the Danish Language was developed by Michel Suignard and Asmus Freytag, including input by Michael Everson, Nicholas Ostler, and Wil Tan, and based on multiple open public consultations.
Changes from Version Dated 10 October 2016
Language tag has been updated.
Changes from Version Dated 18 May 2021
Unicode Version has been updated.
Changes from Version Dated 24 January 2024
Adopted from the Second Level Reference LGR for the Danish Language [Ref-LGR-da-Latn] without normative changes.
References
General references for the language:
Dansk sprognævn. 1996. Retskrivningsordbogen. 2. udgave. København: Aschehoug. ISBN 87-11-10000-1
Dansk sprognævn, in Icelandic Council for Standardization. 1992. Nordic cultural requirements on information technology. Reykjavík: Staðlaráð Íslands. ISBN 9979-9004-3-1
Wikipedia: “Danish orthography”,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danish_alphabetSproget.dk, published in Danish as a co-operation between Kulturministeriets institutioner for sprog og litteratur, Dansk Sprognævn (DSN) and Det Danske Sprog- og Litteraturselskab (DSL). Section under “Råd og regler”, “Retskrivningsregler”, “Bogstaverne”,
https://sproget.dk/raad-og-regler/retskrivningsregler/retskrivningsregler/a7-1-6/a7-1-bogstaverneKøbenhavns Universitet (University of Copenhagen), Names in Denmark, Research into names
https://names.ku.dk/research_into_names/
accessed on 2023-05-01Omniglot: Danish (dansk)
https://www.omniglot.com/writing/danish.htm
Other reference cited in this document:
- [RFC 7940]
- Davies, K. and A. Freytag, “Representing Label Generation Rulesets Using XML”,
RFC 7940, August 2016,
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7940 - [Ref-LGR-da-Latn]
- ICANN, Second Level Reference Label Generation Rules for the Danish Language (da-Latn), 24 January 2024 (XML)
https://www.icann.org/sites/default/files/packages/lgr/lgr-second-level-danish-language-24jan24-en.xml
non-normative HTML presentation:
https://www.icann.org/sites/default/files/packages/lgr/lgr-second-level-danish-language-24jan24-en.html - [Unicode 11.0.0]
- [Ref-LGR-de]
- ICANN, Second Level Reference Label Generation Rules for the German Langauge (de), 24 January 2024 (XML)
https://www.icann.org/sites/default/files/packages/lgr/lgr-second-level-german-language-24jan24-en.xml
non-normative HTML presentation:
https://www.icann.org/sites/default/files/packages/lgr/lgr-second-level-german-language-24jan24-en.html - The Unicode Consortium. The Unicode Standard, Version 11.0.0, (Mountain View, CA: The Unicode Consortium, 2018. ISBN 978-1-936213-19-1)
https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode11.0.0/
In the listing of the repertoire by code point, references starting from [0] refer to the version of the Unicode Standard in which the corresponding code point was initially encoded. Other references (starting from [100]) document usage of code points. Entries in the table may have multiple source reference values. In the listing of whole label evaluation and context rules, reference [150] indicates the source for common rules. For more details, see the Table of References below.
Repertoire
Repertoire Summary
Number of elements in repertoire | 44 | ||||
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Number of code points for each script |
|
||||
Longest code point sequence | 1 |
Repertoire by Code Point
The following table lists the repertoire by code point (or code point sequence). The data in the Script and Name column are extracted from the Unicode character database. Where a comment in the original LGR is equal to the character name, it has been suppressed.
See also the legend provided below the table.
Code Point |
Glyph | Script | Name | Ref | Required Context | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
U+002D | - | Common | HYPHEN-MINUS | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | not: hyphen-minus-disallowed | |
U+0030 | 0 | Common | DIGIT ZERO | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0031 | 1 | Common | DIGIT ONE | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0032 | 2 | Common | DIGIT TWO | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0033 | 3 | Common | DIGIT THREE | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0034 | 4 | Common | DIGIT FOUR | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0035 | 5 | Common | DIGIT FIVE | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0036 | 6 | Common | DIGIT SIX | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0037 | 7 | Common | DIGIT SEVEN | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0038 | 8 | Common | DIGIT EIGHT | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0039 | 9 | Common | DIGIT NINE | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0061 | a | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER A | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0062 | b | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER B | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0063 | c | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER C | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0064 | d | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER D | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0065 | e | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER E | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0066 | f | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER F | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0067 | g | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER G | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0068 | h | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER H | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0069 | i | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER I | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+006A | j | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER J | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+006B | k | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER K | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+006C | l | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER L | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+006D | m | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER M | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+006E | n | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER N | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+006F | o | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER O | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0070 | p | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER P | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0071 | q | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER Q | [0], [100], [301], [401], [502], [601] | ||
U+0072 | r | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER R | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0073 | s | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER S | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0074 | t | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER T | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0075 | u | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER U | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0076 | v | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER V | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0077 | w | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER W | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0078 | x | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER X | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+0079 | y | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER Y | [0], [100], [301], [401], [502], [601] | ||
U+007A | z | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER Z | [0], [100], [301], [401], [501], [601] | ||
U+00E4 | ä | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS | [0], [402], [503], [700] | ||
U+00E5 | å | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE | [0], [100], [200], [301], [401], [501], [603], [604], [700] | ||
U+00E6 | æ | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER AE | [0], [100], [200], [401], [501], [603], [604], [700] | ||
U+00E9 | é | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE | [0], [100], [200], [301], [402], [502], [700] | ||
U+00F6 | ö | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH DIAERESIS | [0], [302], [402], [503], [700] | ||
U+00F8 | ø | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER O WITH STROKE | [0], [100], [200], [401], [501], [603], [604], [700] | ||
U+00FC | ü | Latin | LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH DIAERESIS | [0], [100], [302], [402], [503], [700] |
- Code Point
- A code point or code point sequence.
- Glyph
- The shape displayed depends on the fonts available to your browser.
- Script
- Shows the script property value from the Unicode Character Database. Combining marks may have the value Inherited and code points used with more than one script may have the value Common.
- Name
- Shows the character or sequence name from the Unicode Character Database.
- Ref
- Links to the references associated with the code point or sequence, if any.
- Required Context
- Link to a rule defining the required context a code point or sequence must satisfy. If prefixed by “not:” identifies a context that must not occur.
- Comment
- The comment as given in the XML file. However, if the comment for this row consists only of the code point or sequence name, it is suppressed in this view. By convention, comments starting with “=” denote an alias. If present, the symbol ⍟ marks a default item shared among a set of LGRs.
Variants
This LGR does not specify any variants.
Classes, Rules and Actions
Character Classes
Implict defined by script tag | 2 |
---|
The following table lists all named and implicit classes with their definition and a list of their members intersected with the current repertoire (for larger classes, this list is elided).
Name | Definition | Count | Members or Ranges | Ref | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
implicit | Tag=sc:Latn | 33 | {0061-007A 00E4-00E6 00E9 00F6 00F8 00FC} | Any character tagged as Latin | |
implicit | Tag=sc:Zyyy | 11 | {002D 0030-0039} | Any character tagged as Common |
- Members or Ranges
- Lists the members of the class as code points (xxx) or as ranges of code points (xxx-yyy). Any class too numerous to list in full is elided with "...".
- Tag=ttt
- A named or implicit class defined by all code points that share the given tag value (ttt).
- Implicit
- An anonymous class implicitly defined based on tag value and for which there is no named equivalent.
Whole label evaluation and context rules
Number of rules | 3 |
---|---|
Used to trigger actions | 1 |
Used as context rule (C) | 1 |
Anchored context rules | 1 |
Used only in another rule | 1 |
The following table lists all named rules defined in the LGR and indicates whether they are used as trigger in an action or as context (when or not-when) for a code point or variant.
Name | Regular Expression | Used as Trigger |
Anchor | Used as Context |
Ref | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
leading-combining-mark | (start)[∅=[[∅=\p{gc=Mn}] ∪ [∅=\p{gc=Mc}]]] |
✔ | [150] | RFC 5891 restrictions on placement of combining marks ⍟ | ||
hyphen-minus-disallowed | (((start))← ⚓︎)|(⚓︎ →((end)))|(((start)..\u002D)← ⚓︎) |
✔ | C | [150] | RFC 5891 restrictions on placement of U+002D - ⍟ | |
extended-cp | (start)(end) |
context to gate off code points from the extended range, matches no label ⍟ |
- Used as Trigger
- This rule triggers one of the actions listed below.
- Used as Context
- This rule defines a required or prohibited context for a code point C or variant V.
- Anchor
- This rule has a placeholder for the code point for which it is evaluated.
- Regular Expression
- A regular expression equivalent to the rule, shown in a modified notation as noted:
- ⚓︎ - context anchor
- Placeholder for the actual code point when a context is evaluated. The code point must occur at the position corresponding to the anchor. Rules containing an anchor cannot be used as triggers.
- (...)← - look-behind
- If present encloses required context preceding the anchor.
- →(..) - look-ahead
- If present encloses required context following the anchor.
- ( ) - group
- An anonymous nested rule is used to group match operators.
- (... | ...) - choice
- When there is more than one alternative in a rule, the choices are separated by the alternation operator (...|...).
- start or end
- (start) matches the start of the label; (end) matches the end of the label.
- . - any code point
- . matches any code point.
- [\p{ }] - property
- Set of all characters matching a given value for a Unicode property [\p{prop=val}]. Note: uppercase “\P” defines the complement of a property set.
- ∪, ∩, ∖, ∆ - set operators
- Sets may be combined by set operators (∪ = union, ∩ = intersection, ∖ = difference, ∆ = symmetric difference).
- ∅= - empty set
- Indicates that the following set is empty because of the result of set operations, or because none of its elements is part of the repertoire defined here. A rule with a non-optional empty set never matches.
- (^$) - empty label
- The regex (^$) matches the empty label. Used as a context rule, it always fails to match, thus disallowing the affected code point in any label. By convention, it is used for context rules that disable code points that are not part of the repertoire, yet explicitly listed in the LGR as excluded or for optional future extension.
- ⍟ - default rule
- Rules marked with ⍟ are included by default and may or may not be triggered by any possible label under this LGR.
Note: The following rules are defined but not used in this LGR: extended-cp.
Actions
The following table lists the actions that are used to assign dispositions to labels and variant labels based on the specified conditions. The order of actions defines their precedence: the first action triggered by a label is the one defining its disposition.
# | Condition | Rule / Variant Set | Disposition | Ref | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | if label matches | leading-combining-mark | → | invalid | by default, labels with leading combining marks are invalid | |
2 | if any label (catch-all) | → | valid | catch all |
- {...} - variant type set
- In the “Rule/Variant Set” column, the notation {...} means a set of variant types.
Table of References
The following lists the references cited for specific code points, variants, classes, rules or actions in this LGR. For General references refer to the References section in the Description.
[0] | The Unicode Standard, Version 1.1 Code points cited originally encoded in Unicode Version 1.1 |
[100] | Internetstiftelsen i Sverige (IIS), “IDN Reference table for Danish language”
https://github.com/dotse/IDN-ref-tables/blob/master/language-tables/danish-lang-ref-table.txt accessed on 2016-10-16 |
[150] | RFC 5891, Internationalized Domain Names in Applications (IDNA): Protocol https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5891 |
[200] | ISO/IEC 6937 Third Ed. 2001-12-17- Information
technology — Coded graphic character set for text communication — Latin alphabet: Table D.1 (p 35) Use of Latin alphabetic characters. This table lists only the characters outside the set a-z |
[301] | Everson, Michael. The Alphabets of Europe: “Danish” https://www.evertype.com/alphabets/danish.pdf Code points cited form the standard set |
[302] | Everson, Michael. The Alphabets of Europe: “Danish” https://www.evertype.com/alphabets/danish.pdf Code points cited are from an extended set |
[304] | Everson, Michael. The Alphabets of Europe: “Danish” https://www.evertype.com/alphabets/danish.pdf Code points cited are rare or archaic |
[401] | The Unicode Consortium, Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR) Version 28 (2015-09-16) -
Locale Data Summary for Danish [da] https://www.unicode.org/cldr/charts/28/summary/da.html Code points cited are from the set of Main Letters |
[402] | The Unicode Consortium, Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR) Version 28 (2015-09-16) -
Locale Data Summary for Danish [da] https://www.unicode.org/cldr/charts/28/summary/da.html Code points cited are from the Auxiliary set |
[501] | Dansk sprognævn, in Icelandic Council for Standardization. 1992.
Nordic cultural requirements on information technology. Reykjavík: Staðlaráð Íslands. ISBN 9979-9004-3-1 Code points cited are of category 1: Letters essential for the language |
[502] | Dansk sprognævn, in Icelandic Council for Standardization. 1992.
Nordic cultural requirements on information technology. Reykjavík: Staðlaráð Íslands. ISBN 9979-9004-3-1 Code points cited are of category 2: Letters commonly used, but not essential |
[503] | Dansk sprognævn, in Icelandic Council for Standardization. 1992.
Nordic cultural requirements on information technology. Reykjavík: Staðlaráð Íslands. ISBN 9979-9004-3-1 Code points cited are of category 3: Letters used for names, in common practice |
[504] | Dansk sprognævn, in Icelandic Council for Standardization. 1992.
Nordic cultural requirements on information technology. Reykjavík: Staðlaráð Íslands. ISBN 9979-9004-3-1 Code points cited are of category 4: Letters that are rarely used |
[601] | Wikipedia: “Latin Alphabets” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_alphabets accessed 2015-10-31 According to this reference, the alphabet is listed as using the full basic set A-Z |
[603] | ISO/IEC 646:1991 — Information
technology — ISO 7-bit coded character set for information interchange Code points cited are supported in a national edition of ISO-646. |
[604] | Wikipedia: “Latin Alphabets” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_alphabets accessed 2015-10-31 The table only lists code points beyond A-Z |
[700] | DK Hostmaster A/S “Godkendte Tegn for domænenavne", 16 December 2020
https://www.dk-hostmaster.dk/sites/default/files/2020-12/Godkendte%20tegn%20for%20dk-domaenenavne.pdf. accessed on 2023-04-30 Code points cited are the non-ASCII code points listed by the registry for .dk domain |