Learning Dutch

Rick van Opbergen

House Member
Sep 16, 2004
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The Netherlands
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OK I'll start with some basics, although nobody seems to be interested :wink:

Now, there are two important verbs that are essential in well, all languages: to be and to have. These two are translated as (te) zijn and (te) hebben.

But first this: how to translate things like I, you, he, she, we, they? A list:

(English) (Dutch)
I = Ik
You (singular) = Jij
He = Hij
She = Zij
We = Wij
You (plural) = Jullie
They = Zij

Well, that ain't too complicated, eh?

Now, the verbs zijn and hebben. Warning: they are irregular! See whether you understand it.

I am = Ik ben
You are (singular) = Jij bent
He is = Hij is (well, that ain't very hard, eh?)
She is = Zij is
We are = Wij zijn
You are (plural) = Jullie zijn
They are = Zij zijn

Nou the other one:

I have = Ik heb
You have (singular) = Jij hebt
He has = Hij heeft
She has = Zij heeft
We have = Wij hebben
You have (plural) = Jullie hebben
They have = Zij hebben

Ok, this was lesson 01 :)
 

Andem

dev
Mar 24, 2002
5,645
129
63
Larnaka
I will try my best to translate the pronunciation, too. Let me know if it's wrong Rick.

I = Ik Ick
You (singular) = Jij Yee
He = Hij Hee
She = Zij Zee
We = Wij Vee
You (plural) = Jullie Yuelee
They = Zij Zee
 

Pemmican

Electoral Member
Nov 14, 2004
132
0
16
Westphalia
Why?
To make it easier for us non-native English speakers to learn *hehe*

Unlike Dutch, where you need to learn
jij, jullie and U
--> the U tends to get lost, too, right?! It's nearly vanished in Scandinavian languages already.

In German, all three forms are still used for addressing:
du (you, sg.), ihr (you, pl.) and Sie (polite you, sg and pl).

In old literature and films setting around the middle ages, also "Ihr" (you, pl.) is used instead of Sie (polite you, sg, pl) to be the polite form of addressing, also for a single person. "Er/sie" (he/she) can be found in addition as a pronoun for addressing people in older language.
For the Majestatis Pluralis, "Wir" (we) is used instead of ich (I). ;-)