Qualcuno di voi sa cosa potrebbe essere quel cartello stradale con tre puntini blu? Dovrebbe essere un vecchio segno danese, ma non riesco a capirne il significato. Grazie.
Qualcuno di voi sa cosa potrebbe essere quel cartello stradale con tre puntini blu? Dovrebbe essere un vecchio segno danese, ma non riesco a capirne il significato. Grazie.
Der er også et billede fra 1941 hvor det ser ud til at skiltet betyder “Særlige påbud eller forbud” og der ville være en undertavle der beskrev på- eller forbuddet.
Jeg mener det betyder at Döve personer plejer at gå her. Der er et tilsvarende skilt for blinde.
StrangeUglyBird on
Spurgte chatGPT:
It sounds like you may have seen a **Danish military area or restricted zone** sign. In Denmark, there is a round white sign with three evenly spaced blue dots around the edge, which is used to indicate that entry is restricted, typically for military or defense-related areas.
This kind of sign is not very common on regular roads but is used near military bases, training grounds, or restricted government areas. The dots distributed evenly around the perimeter of the sign serve as a visual marker of restricted access, signaling that unauthorized entry is prohibited, and often accompanied by additional signage or barriers.
If it was near such a location, this would explain its purpose!
8 Comments
Det er et “:O” skilt men det vender på siden
Redigering: det er jo faktisk en tavle
Det er for blinde
Bowlingbane forude
Ifølge [emaljetavler](http://www.emaljetavler.dk/) betyder vejskiltet fra 1918 “Forbudt vej”.
Der er også et billede fra 1941 hvor det ser ud til at skiltet betyder “Særlige påbud eller forbud” og der ville være en undertavle der beskrev på- eller forbuddet.
Mener det er den gamle [“Indkørsel forbudt”](https://www.vejhistorie.dk/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/MEDDEL-2009-2.pdf) færdselstavle.
overrasket albino smiley
Jeg mener det betyder at Döve personer plejer at gå her. Der er et tilsvarende skilt for blinde.
Spurgte chatGPT:
It sounds like you may have seen a **Danish military area or restricted zone** sign. In Denmark, there is a round white sign with three evenly spaced blue dots around the edge, which is used to indicate that entry is restricted, typically for military or defense-related areas.
This kind of sign is not very common on regular roads but is used near military bases, training grounds, or restricted government areas. The dots distributed evenly around the perimeter of the sign serve as a visual marker of restricted access, signaling that unauthorized entry is prohibited, and often accompanied by additional signage or barriers.
If it was near such a location, this would explain its purpose!