Tonnie
Tonnie is a Danish, Dutch, Portuguese and Swedish given name and diminutive nickname with both masculine and feminine uses.[1][2][3] As a Danish and Swedish name it is used as a diminutive of Antonia in Greenland, Denmark and Sweden, but also has masculine uses.[2] As a Dutch name it has feminine used as a diminutive of Antonia in Belgium, Indonesia, Suriname, South Africa, Namibia, and the Netherlands.[3] As both a Dutch and Portuguese name it has masculine use as diminutives of Antônio, António, Antonius, Anton, Antoon, Anthonis, and Anthoon in Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Belgium, Indonesia, Suriname, South Africa, Namibia, and the Netherlands.[1] Notable people with the name include the following:
Given name
- Tonnie Cusell, whose full name is Tonnie Harry Cusell Lilipaly (born 1983), Dutch-born naturalized Indonesian footballer
Nickname/stagename
- Tonnie Dirks, nickname of Antonius Marinus Hendricus Maria Dirks (born 1961), Dutch long distance athlete
- Tonnie Hom, nickname of Antonia Johanna Hom (1932 – 2013), Dutch swimmer
gollark: ```GoalsThese goals may change or be refined over time as I experiment with what is possible with the language. Embeddable - Similiar to Lua - it is meant to be included in another program which may use the virtual machine to extend its own functionality. Statically typed - The language uses a Hindley-Milner based type system with some extensions, allowing simple and general type inference. Tiny - By being tiny, the language is easy to learn and has a small implementation footprint. Strict - Strict languages are usually easier to reason about, especially considering that it is what most people are accustomed to. For cases where laziness is desired, an explict type is provided. Modular - The library is split into parser, typechecker, and virtual machine + compiler. Each of these components can be use independently of each other, allowing applications to pick and choose exactly what they need.```
gollark: That's rude.
gollark: ```elmlet factorial n : Int -> Int = if n < 2 then 1 else n * factorial (n - 1)factorial 10```A factorial example from the docs.
gollark: Well, yes, it has an interpreter and stuff.
gollark: Actually, possibly not, no idea what you mean.
See also
- All pages with titles beginning with Tonnie
- All pages with titles containing Tonnie
- Tonie
- Tonne (name)
- Tönnies
- Townie (disambiguation)
Notes
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