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Flying Tiger Copenhagen (formerly Tiger) is a Danish variety store chain. [3] [4] Its first shop opened in Copenhagen in 1995 and as of 2023, the chain now has 931 shops across 42 countries. Its largest markets are Denmark, the UK, Italy, and Spain. According to the company's annual report, it had more than 93 million customers in 2023. [1]
Stores Type of store Parent; SPAR >130 [1] convenience: Dagrofa: Min købmand >160 [2] convenience: Dagrofa: Meny: 111 [3] full service: Dagrofa: 7-Eleven: ca.200 [4] convenience: Reitan Group: Netto: 514 [5] discount: Salling Group: Kvickly: 65 [6] full service: Coop Danmark: Bilka: 19 [7] hypermarket: Salling Group: Dagli'Brugsen: ca. 300 [8 ...
Instead, Danes refer colloquially to a 10-kroner coin as a 'ti'er', literally 'tenner' (as a £10 note is referred to in Britain) - this sounds like 'tee-er' in English, and rhymes with the Danish pronunciation of 'tiger', the word for 'tiger'.188.230.248.85 10:47, 10 May 2016 (UTC)
Irma, a supermarket chain operated by Coop Danmark, [1] was founded in 1886 by Carl Schepler as a small grocery store selling eggs in Ravnsborggade in Nørrebro, Copenhagen. The chain is the second oldest groceries chain in the world, after Marks & Spencer. As of 2015, the chain had 80 stores, [12] mostly located in the Metropolitan Copenhagen ...
The main street is bound on the west by City Hall Square (Danish: Rådhuspladsen), the central town square by Copenhagen City Hall, and on the east by Kongens Nytorv ("The King's New Square"), another large square at the other end. But the Strøget area is actually a collection of streets that spread out from this central thoroughfare.
First Lady Melania Trump greets former First Lady Michelle Obama during the 2017 Presidential Inauguration at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20, 2017.
Amid growing anxieties surrounding reported drone sightings, the FBI has issued a warning against a new trend of pointing lasers at aircrafts.
In the same time, Amagertorv continued to be the premier marketplace of the city, and from 28 July 1684 all sale of fresh produce was to take place in the square. [2] From 1656 the city's leading inn was also located on the square. Amagertorv during the Copenhagen Fire of 1795. Few buildings on the square survived the Copenhagen Fire of 1795 ...