i never understood why it takes people so long to learn this language, i have a swedish friend and when he came to live here for a year he picked up the language in 6 months
@@Finnie1203 its true this language is MUCH easier than most. If you put in yhr hours you shiuld be at a good level my 2 years. But ur Swedish friend had a slight advantage ad they already spoke a nordic language
I was trying to conjugate verbs for some homework i had and couldnt understand why some of these were different or why did they change when looking it up online. This video explained everything in an easy and simple way making it funny and interesting. 10/10
this is helping me so much, I'm starting to learn dutch by myself and the grammar and verbs can be very confusing sometimes but this explanation is very useful 🙏🏾
A great question and well explained answer. I thought I was losing my hearing (I’m 63) and I often hear speakers use the Schwa rather than the “n”. So thanks! I learned about variations in pronunciation but I also learnt I am not going deaf! Great lesson thank you so much!
This video deals with the regular verbs, so all the predictable verbs. Gaan and doen, hebben etc are irregular and I am afraid you'll just have to learn them. BUT the spelling rules we cover in the video do apply there too. Good luck!
Do we pronounce the EN in the final of the verbs as a Schwa sound, a schwan and n sound or as an EN sound? It happens to me that I hear that sound differently in some occasions, só I'm a bit confused (it's not much related to the content on the video, but I needed to ask 😬)
There is quite a lot of variation really, regionally mainly but the good thing is that it is not wrong to pronounce the 'n' with an 'en' ending. It will just make you sound a bit northern and there is nothing wrong with that. We tend to say, drop the 'n', and then you will hear a schwa.
It was an informative and creative teaching clip. Nevertheless, the quality of the voice-over and using music was not convenient at all. Do not forget that people look at this video clip for learning Dutch, not listening to music!
Zijn is an irregular verb so not covered in this video. It is one to learn by heart I'm afraid. But many verbs are predictable and that is where this video comes in.
can't believe this is my third year exploring dutch on my free time. wanted to refresh my knowledge and, of course, came back to this video
I've been trying to learn for 2years and this is the first real, clear explanation I've found. Thanks you!
i never understood why it takes people so long to learn this language, i have a swedish friend and when he came to live here for a year he picked up the language in 6 months
@@Finnie1203 its true this language is MUCH easier than most. If you put in yhr hours you shiuld be at a good level my 2 years. But ur Swedish friend had a slight advantage ad they already spoke a nordic language
@@ashempire527 Well most people attempting to learn dutch already know a germanic language. 2 years is insane
Hello prof. This is an excellent guide for first timer like me. Thanks so much.
The best video to learn the present tense. So easy to understand and the information is complete. 💯
wow thank you so much. everything is so clear and easy to remember.
Love this video: the music, the voice, the simple but very effective explanation. Dankuwel!!
I was trying to conjugate verbs for some homework i had and couldnt understand why some of these were different or why did they change when looking it up online. This video explained everything in an easy and simple way making it funny and interesting. 10/10
Clear and beautiful explanation
Dakuwel, it is a very good technique of the language teaching.
this is helping me so much, I'm starting to learn dutch by myself and the grammar and verbs can be very confusing sometimes but this explanation is very useful 🙏🏾
Bedankt voor uw werk❤ en speciale dank voor de Oekraïense ondertitels. Het is belangrijk voor me om Nederlands te begrijpen.
forever my favorite teaching video on the internet. love everything about it
Great explanation! So easy to understand and very concise. Many thanks!
After seeing this video I really understand it's so helpful for beginners 👍
An excellent explanation, thank you.
Quite informative, systematic and funny way of learning the language. Thumbs up 👍
A great question and well explained answer. I thought I was losing my hearing (I’m 63) and I often hear speakers use the Schwa rather than the “n”. So thanks! I learned about variations in pronunciation but I also learnt I am not going deaf!
Great lesson thank you so much!
Thank you for fabulous explanation!!!) I’ve already subscribed!
very well explained and I am surprised that this videos doesn't have many more views. Thank a lot.
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for the clear explanation
Please make more this kind of videos
Thanks for your clear instruction. It is super easy to understand!
Very clear and easy to understand...Dank u wel
Perfect explanation
Woow thank you so much, I love the animation, for real it help a lot!
It’s sooooooooo helpful, really thank you for that perfect animation.
This is extremely clear and well explained, love it! thanks alot
Thank u great videos
Well explained! love it!
Thank you so much
Fantastic video!
Dank u wel!
Super lesson
super cours merci beaucoup
thank you soooo much!
great video
Perfect lesson! Zeer bedankt!
best video about this subject! Dunk u!
Really like this simple algorithm.
More videos pleaseeeee
Am I hearing it right - you don't pronounce the -en sound in the infinitive?
Dank u wel voor de video
Gréât vidéo !!! Really really useful !!!! Prima ! Dank u !!!!
💯 good
Aaaa so easy and soo sweet❤
what if the verb doesn't end in en? for example, 'gaan'?
This video deals with the regular verbs, so all the predictable verbs. Gaan and doen, hebben etc are irregular and I am afraid you'll just have to learn them. BUT the spelling rules we cover in the video do apply there too. Good luck!
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ ich danke dir herzlich aus Marokko
Do we pronounce the EN in the final of the verbs as a Schwa sound, a schwan and n sound or as an EN sound? It happens to me that I hear that sound differently in some occasions, só I'm a bit confused (it's not much related to the content on the video, but I needed to ask 😬)
There is quite a lot of variation really, regionally mainly but the good thing is that it is not wrong to pronounce the 'n' with an 'en' ending. It will just make you sound a bit northern and there is nothing wrong with that. We tend to say, drop the 'n', and then you will hear a schwa.
@@Dutch-UoS ooh, thank you so much. That question was killing me. I was pronouncing it as a Schwa. I wasn't wrong after all, haha
It was an informative and creative teaching clip. Nevertheless, the quality of the voice-over and using music was not convenient at all. Do not forget that people look at this video clip for learning Dutch, not listening to music!
Thank you for your feedback!
ik ben zo dankbaar
bedankt. teacher.
Bedankt
Bedankt!
Wow good job 😊
amazing
Prima! Dank u wel!!!
dank u wel
nice
Wooow am impressed
whats the deal with "Zijn"?
Zijn is an irregular verb so not covered in this video. It is one to learn by heart I'm afraid. But many verbs are predictable and that is where this video comes in.
Very nice video but background music little bit low:
Seriously? This is a stellar explanation. And it's free. And you're playing music critic?
Perfect explanation!!
👏🏽
Prachtig!
At times the background music was overpowering you, but thanks for the lesson! 🙏🏾
watching this so I can understand ongezellig without subs
It is too theoretic. Why not looking at the full conjugation of verbs?
Yuuu
Very nice video! I would just remove the background music
Noted!
It is a little messy to learn it that way.
Maybe you should change your method
nah, it's good
Good video. Terrible audio
Dank je❤