I’m Japanese, I had been struggling to study Dutch. Honestly I had almost gave up, but thank you for videos, now I can improve my Dutch gradually. Thank you for your useful videos.
Been learning Dutch because my best buddy is Belgian, and this is one of the last "simple" parts that catches me out. I'm getting a feel for a lot of the sentence structure, at least basic structure, and "niet" has been a real thorn in my side. I'd heard about the adjective rule, but then got confused why it came after the adjectives when they weren't standalone, as I never even considered the distinction. Thank you!
Hi Sonal, you're welcome. Zijn means 'to be' and hebben 'to have', and they're mostly used just like in English. However, there are some exceptions, like in the past tense: ua-cam.com/video/01pRwA1EUm0/v-deo.html
Thank you so much! I love the simple way you explained! I am learning flemish dutch and it is very difficult, but your channel helps a lot! Thank you. I am going to follow you and subscribe
thanks for this brilliant video, you covered a lot more than what i read on the internet! but i have one question: when you were talking about stressed 'niet', what would you say is the general rule for placement depending on the surrounding words?
The rule for putting the verbs at the end is stronger than the niet: Ik ga naar Nederland omdat ik niet in België wil blijven. Dus uses inversion, so the rule for niet is the same. And maar uses normal word order, so it's again the same rule.
I have a doubt with the negation For the question "Ga Je mee?" I tried answering as "Nee, ik ga mee niet" because there is no second verb and so I am using niet towards the end of the sentence. However I saw a place where they have written the right answer as "Nee, ik ga niet mee" Could you please tell me which one is right?
Hi Richard, 'mee' is part of the verb, the infinitive is 'meenemen'. So mee will always be at the end. These verbs splitting up are called 'separable verbs', and you can learn about them here: ua-cam.com/video/vAf68ebL9oY/v-deo.html
Thank you, was really helpful but I suggest you too adjust the voice louder cause i turn my volume maximum but it is still small. Keep up the good work!!
My (Dutch) spouse would as a default translate "Ik moet de auto niet kopen" as, "I must not buy the car" (or the less idiomatic, split infinitive "I have to not buy the car" (in both cases, point being, it's imperative that it not be bought) rather than, "I don't have to buy the car" (i.e., I have the choice). Though he then adds that emphasis or situation or regional usage could affect default usage. I suspect there's a 1:1 correlation of "I must not [verb]*" in English to, Ik moet niet [verb]" in Dutch. *For a negative requirement in english, it is broadly comprehensible to use the split infinitive "have to not-[verb]" in English (as opposed to the Dutch-lish, awkward "I must not to [verb]" and "I have not to [verb]" which are never correct). Most idiomatic, and most correct, will essentially always be, "I must not [verb]" (or the contracted form, "I mustn't [verb]," though that's a bit more Brit than US english. As for geen, that's for when you can substitute "no," in the english sentence. "I have no [noun]" is always, so far as I know, "Ik heb geen [noun]." Equally so when the noun is countable (e.g. a car) or uncountable (e.g., water).
Goedeavond Alain! Ik ben Gülden. Ik kom uit Turkije. Ik woon al twee jaar in Belgie, maar op september start ik de cursus in CVO. Ik studeeren graag Dutch met jou. ( Sorry for my Dutch if I have any mistakes.) Ik heb een vraag. Drie plus vijf …. negen. A) geen B) niet Wat is de antwoord en waarom? Dank u wel…
I don't understand, you say in the First minutes de geen is IN FRONT OF THE NOUM ( auto) but its behind the noum (ik heb geen auto) why are you saying that it's in front if it's behind wth that's confusing my brain while watching this...
I tried many videos, but this one was the most useful and clear. Thank you!
I’m Japanese, I had been struggling to study Dutch. Honestly I had almost gave up, but thank you for videos, now I can improve my Dutch gradually. Thank you for your useful videos.
Thanks a lot, you can do it!
Very nice content! Clear, short videos, and to the point!
Thank you for your efforts!
Been learning Dutch because my best buddy is Belgian, and this is one of the last "simple" parts that catches me out. I'm getting a feel for a lot of the sentence structure, at least basic structure, and "niet" has been a real thorn in my side.
I'd heard about the adjective rule, but then got confused why it came after the adjectives when they weren't standalone, as I never even considered the distinction. Thank you!
You're welcome, keep on learning!
You are such a great teacher ♥
Thank you! 😃
Thank you ! Struggled long time with this and everything is clear now
Happy to help! Feel free to ask for other topics.
Hi Alain,
Thankyou for your vedios, can you please make vedio on when to use Hebben and when to use zijn in perfectum
Hi Sonal, you're welcome. Zijn means 'to be' and hebben 'to have', and they're mostly used just like in English. However, there are some exceptions, like in the past tense: ua-cam.com/video/01pRwA1EUm0/v-deo.html
Wanted to learn a new language over the summer and this part was really bugging me
Thanks for the clear explanation!
Happy to help!
Really helpful video, the best one i found so far. Thanks for explaining.
Glad it was helpful!
very effective, love you content
Glad you enjoy it!
Ik geniet van het kijken naar je video's!
Thank you so much! I love the simple way you explained! I am learning flemish dutch and it is very difficult, but your channel helps a lot! Thank you. I am going to follow you and subscribe
Thanks! Let me know if there's anything difficult!
@@LearnDutchwithAlain i don't know if you already did but i need some help with the separable and inseparable compound verbs. Thank you !
@@annaclaudiadrc Hi, sure, but it's not public yet: ua-cam.com/video/vAf68ebL9oY/v-deo.html
@@LearnDutchwithAlain thanx!!! I already subscribe your channel but i didn't saw it!
@@annaclaudiadrc No worries, I'll try to forgive you :)
thanks for this brilliant video, you covered a lot more than what i read on the internet!
but i have one question: when you were talking about stressed 'niet', what would you say is the general rule for placement depending on the surrounding words?
Thanks! The other words generally remain in the same place. The niet is just in front of the stressed word you want to negate.
@@LearnDutchwithAlain Thanks a ton!
Thanks Alain. I had the same issue with "don't" before.
Can you explain between perfectum and imperfertum as well?
Veel bedankt voor de video's.
Hi Ervan, thanks for the kind words. It's not public yet, but here it is: ua-cam.com/video/nDZJM1oqDWQ/v-deo.html
Thank you 😊
LVOE
Hello i wonder niet comers before the verb if there is omdat is it the rule for every combination words like dus, en maar etc
The rule for putting the verbs at the end is stronger than the niet: Ik ga naar Nederland omdat ik niet in België wil blijven. Dus uses inversion, so the rule for niet is the same. And maar uses normal word order, so it's again the same rule.
@@LearnDutchwithAlain thank you very much. I am recommending your videos to all my friends.
Helpful
so where will 'niet' placed if in a sentence there is noun , adjective preposition and verb at the end or somewhere else.... pls reply
Before the adjective, preposition and the verb: Ik moet niet lang in het huis blijven.
@LearnDutchwithAlain means after 1st verb .... is dat correct?
I have a doubt with the negation
For the question "Ga Je mee?"
I tried answering as "Nee, ik ga mee niet" because there is no second verb and so I am using niet towards the end of the sentence.
However I saw a place where they have written the right answer as "Nee, ik ga niet mee"
Could you please tell me which one is right?
Hi Richard, 'mee' is part of the verb, the infinitive is 'meenemen'. So mee will always be at the end. These verbs splitting up are called 'separable verbs', and you can learn about them here: ua-cam.com/video/vAf68ebL9oY/v-deo.html
@@LearnDutchwithAlain Thank you for the prompt reply Alian! much appreciated
Thank you, was really helpful but I suggest you too adjust the voice louder cause i turn my volume maximum but it is still small. Keep up the good work!!
Thanks! Sorry, I already put it on the loudest possible :( maybe you can listen with earphones?
Huh? The audio was fine - Je hebt GEEN goed gehoor
Thank you!! I have a question!! "Ik kan geen twee dingen tegelijk" how come geen is used here?!
Geen stands with dingen. Same for 'Ik heb geen groene kleren.' You're allowed to put an adjective in between geen and your noun.
@@LearnDutchwithAlain oh!! That makes it so simple!! Youre so good at teaching. Thank you so much
My (Dutch) spouse would as a default translate "Ik moet de auto niet kopen" as, "I must not buy the car" (or the less idiomatic, split infinitive "I have to not buy the car" (in both cases, point being, it's imperative that it not be bought) rather than, "I don't have to buy the car" (i.e., I have the choice). Though he then adds that emphasis or situation or regional usage could affect default usage.
I suspect there's a 1:1 correlation of "I must not [verb]*" in English to, Ik moet niet [verb]" in Dutch.
*For a negative requirement in english, it is broadly comprehensible to use the split infinitive "have to not-[verb]" in English (as opposed to the Dutch-lish, awkward "I must not to [verb]" and "I have not to [verb]" which are never correct). Most idiomatic, and most correct, will essentially always be, "I must not [verb]" (or the contracted form, "I mustn't [verb]," though that's a bit more Brit than US english.
As for geen, that's for when you can substitute "no," in the english sentence. "I have no [noun]" is always, so far as I know, "Ik heb geen [noun]." Equally so when the noun is countable (e.g. a car) or uncountable (e.g., water).
Thanks!
can someone explain why do they say "ze komt vanavond niet"?
Hm, 'she isn't coming tonight.' The niet is simply at the end.
why does “de kinderen eten geen rijst” use geen even if it is not indefinite noun ( the children)
The 'geen' is with rijst, not with de kinderen. And rijst is an indefinite noun.
What about using GEEN to say u Don't have a child or children
That's ik heb geen kinderen.
Hoi Alain van welke gedeelte van Nederland or de wereld komt u vandaan?
Uit België :)
@@LearnDutchwithAlain oh I thought I detected a Belgian accent. Thank you for making this video. Its very helpful
@@saulto Thanks :) You have an excellent detector!
Goedeavond Alain! Ik ben Gülden. Ik kom uit Turkije. Ik woon al twee jaar in Belgie, maar op september start ik de cursus in CVO.
Ik studeeren graag Dutch met jou.
( Sorry for my Dutch if I have any mistakes.)
Ik heb een vraag.
Drie plus vijf …. negen.
A) geen
B) niet
Wat is de antwoord en waarom?
Dank u wel…
Merhabalar! Ik denk dat het is: Drie plus vijf is niet negen. Maar het is meer een gevoel. Nedeni bilmiyorum...
@@LearnDutchwithAlain Wauw, je hebt uitstekend Turks! Dank je wel voor je snelle antwoord!
waarom spreek je ‘geen’ uit als ‘gien’ in plaats van ‘gijn’?
Ik spreek het uit als 'geen'...
I think he is from a certain region or from Belgium
I don't understand, you say in the First minutes de geen is IN FRONT OF THE NOUM ( auto) but its behind the noum (ik heb geen auto) why are you saying that it's in front if it's behind wth that's confusing my brain while watching this...
Hm, in 'ik heb geen auto', the 'geen' is in front of the noun. First there's 'geen,' then there's 'auto.' So it becomes 'geen auto.'
why we say on dutch " Mijn gezin is niet klein " ?
That's the part from 4:38, it's a standalone adjective.
But we have noun
Dutch grammar is driving me crazy😂
:D
Denken
Ik ben niet de baas of ik ben de baas niet?
Beide, omdat je ook de nadruk kan leggen op 'de baas' in de eerste zin.
please change your bangruond it's not good