As a native English speaker, I appreciate this practice exercise for a few reasons, but most importantly for me, it reinforces the pronunciation of "een" as "u-hn" vs. it's close relative, "geen," pronounced as I understand it, as "hey-n"
Thank you for the video. I have a question. At 1:23, you mentioned that the negative of 'zij heeft twee zussen' is 'zij heeft geen zussen.' Wouldn't the negative be 'Zij heeft geen twee zussen'?
As a native English speaker, I appreciate this practice exercise for a few reasons, but most importantly for me, it reinforces the pronunciation of "een" as "u-hn" vs. it's close relative, "geen," pronounced as I understand it, as "hey-n"
"geen" sounds smilar to the number 1. When you write één with the accents on top, you pronounce the /ee/ as in the words "been" and "geen".
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Thank you for the video. I have a question. At 1:23, you mentioned that the negative of 'zij heeft twee zussen' is 'zij heeft geen zussen.' Wouldn't the negative be 'Zij heeft geen twee zussen'?
Creo que es porque zussen ya esta en plural