I cannot think of a better professor than this person for teaching a complete beginner the dutch language. This guy is amazing! He explains so good, you cannot belive it! Love this guy! Thank you very much for you videos! They are pure gold for me!
Wat Leuk! Just yesterday I watched this video. For me, it's a little complicated because the genre in Portuguese is in the last vocal of the word and not everything that is masculine for me is in Dutch or German...
Thank you for the explanation. , article in my language ( hindi ) work similar with singular ( same as een ) / . Even when it is definitive it does not change for different objects. But it gets crazy with possessive pronouns , as they change with subjects gender and even for example "pen (fem)" or "city (male)" have gender. Hope i am clear
Great video, not only to learn Dutch articles, but also a great explanation of definitiveness in general.
I cannot think of a better professor than this person for teaching a complete beginner the dutch language. This guy is amazing! He explains so good, you cannot belive it! Love this guy! Thank you very much for you videos! They are pure gold for me!
Great instruction!! Very informative about nederlands
Good lessons. I’m enjoying it a lot. I wish I found this before my holiday to Amsterdam
Dankuwel!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻😃
Wat Leuk! Just yesterday I watched this video. For me, it's a little complicated because the genre in Portuguese is in the last vocal of the word and not everything that is masculine for me is in Dutch or German...
Thank you for the explanation. , article in my language ( hindi ) work similar with singular ( same as een ) / . Even when it is definitive it does not change for different objects.
But it gets crazy with possessive pronouns , as they change with subjects gender and even for example "pen (fem)" or "city (male)" have gender.
Hope i am clear
Please I saw some where Het is sometimes translate as it , please can you explain that.
yes Het translates as "it" for exmp. Het is een boek. It's a book.
And also het is an article (definite) along with de and een(indefinite).
Just found an APP called De-Het or Flash your Dutch !