Forums › Life › Jokes & Humour › NL : how to pronounce "g" in Dutch
found this on yahoo
Try this: say UGHH, like you are coughing, and keep the g going like a kat hissing from its throat.
and that is 100% correct too 😉
:laugh_at:
Hi all ,
I love the Dutch , great people but i doubt ill ever be able to speak there language ……luck most Dutch speak English……and better than what i do 🙂
regards
Mungo
Haha, love this topic.
And yes, it’s correct.
@mungo1972 417571 wrote:
Hi all ,
I love the Dutch , great people but i doubt ill ever be able to speak there language ……luck most Dutch speak English……and better than what i do 🙂regards
Mungo
Dutch is one of the most difficult languages there are to learn.
After more then 10 years of spellings lessons I still don’t know exactly how to spell.
There are different rules for almost every verb.
Hi Debris ,
LOL glad its not just me then …..Lucky the Dutch are so good at Speaking English 🙂 . They are so chilled and have a good sense of humour …..I think i might want to live in Holland 🙂
Regards
Mungo
@Debris 417579 wrote:
Haha, love this topic.
And yes, it’s correct.Dutch is one of the most difficult languages there are to learn.
After more then 10 years of spellings lessons I still don’t know exactly how to spell.
There are different rules for almost every verb.
wat maakt onze talen zo moeilijke, is dat zij zijn hele soortgelijke 😉
- Westerkertiers: t Eenege dat wie niet doun is slik uutdeeln
- Stadsgrunnegs (city): t Oinege dat wie noit doun is baaltjes oetdailn
- Hoogelaandsters: t Ainege dat wie nait dudden is slik oetdijln
- Westerwoolds: t Einege dat wie nich dun is slikkerij uutdeiln
- Veenkelonioals: t Ainege wat wie nait dudden is slikke uutduiln
- East Frisian Low Saxon: Dat eenzige, dat wi neet doon is Slickeree utdelen.
- Northern Low Saxon of Germany: Dat eenzige, dat wi nich doot, (dat) is Snabbelkraam uutdeeln.
- Standard Dutch: Het enige dat we niet doen is snoep uitdelen.
- Standard German: Das einzige, das wir nicht machen, ist Süßigkeiten austeilen.
- Scots: The anerly thing we dinnae dae is gie oot snashters.
- English: The only thing we do not do is hand out sweets.
I was in the pub a few weeks ago, and my friend is Danish – but when he visits his family he speaks to them in German (I am not sure why, perhaps !sinner69! can explain this phenomenon). And for some reason (after we had drunk much beer), he tries to get me to speak to him in German, which I just about managed but ended up slipping into Dutch..
the “g” is not so difficult for me, as I used to practice hissing like a cat.
Some years ago my family used to have two cats, but one (the more dominant cat) went missing. so the remaining cat (which inspired me to use the “witte kat” avatar) was being bullied by a half-siameese cat in a neighbouring house
And one night I came back home late, waited for this other cat, and hissed and caterwauled it until it ran away :laugh_at:
Does anyone have any idea if the dutdch still have control of all those colonies in the americas?
They still have sovereignty over Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten….
@mungo1972 417580 wrote:
Hi Debris ,
LOL glad its not just me then …..Lucky the Dutch are so good at Speaking English 🙂 . They are so chilled and have a good sense of humour …..I think i might want to live in Holland 🙂Regards
Mungo
who wouldnt want to live in holland! very cheap very high quality drugs, relaxed laws on them, allowed to grow up to like 5 weed plants in ur home and coffeeshops! lol it would be great
My mum is dutch and she is from Venlo. She moved to England when she was 22 and speaks perfect english with no dutch accent, u wudnt even know she is dutch.
When we go there to see family, my auntie lives in Antwerpen and they speak a completely different dialect of dutch compared to Venlo, and they are only an hour and a half drive apart.
The dutch are brilliant, so laid back and chilled, and the whole place is so clean and tidy. The food is the tits aswell, my nan makes the best soup you could ever taste!
france used to be the same, 100’s of different dialects, of cause this changed at the turn of the 18th century, when french as we know became the official language. As far as i’m aware there are still pockets of france that still speak these dialects…. not france, not latin or even flemish, but a almost local language as it were
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Forums › Life › Jokes & Humour › NL : how to pronounce "g" in Dutch