Dutch grammar Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
This page will attempt to outline the grammar of Dutch.
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2 Nouns |
Structurally, Dutch is an SOV language, meaning that the unmarked word order is subject - object - verb. Furthermore, Dutch main clauses show V2 (Verb Second) language, which means that the inflected verb is raised to the second position in the clause.
Cf.
Changes in word order are used in interrogative sentences ("Ging je naar de winkel?", "Did you go to the store?"), changes from active to passive voice ("De auto werd door Jan gekocht", "The car was bought by John"), and lexical or grammatical emphasis (topicalization). Teachers like to make sentences like 'Door Jan werd de auto gekocht' to trick students into thinking Jan is the subject.
Here are some rules about where to place the words in a Dutch sentence:
In Dutch, nouns generally describe persons, places, things, and abstract ideas, and are treated as grammatically distinct from verbs.
In Dutch there are three genderss, masculine, feminine and neuter. Every noun is associated with one gender, and the gender must be learned when learning the noun. Nouns are also marked for number, size and definiteness.
When you want to refer to one particular person or item, you use the definite article de for masculine-feminine words and het or "'t" for neuter words.
In plural always de is used.
Word Order
John told that he his mother wanted go help
"John told that he wanted to go help his mother."
Rode appels - red applesNouns
Definite article
| Person: | 1st singular | 3rd singular | 1st plural | 3rd plural | 2nd | interrogative |
| Nominative | ik | hij, ie3, ze, zij, het, 't | we | ze, zij | jullie | wie |
| Accusative | me, mij | hem, 'm, haar, d'r3, het, 't | ons | hen4 | jij | wie |
| Genitive | mijn | zijn, z'n, haar, d'r3 | ons, onze | hun | jouw, je | van wie, wiens1, wier1 |
| Dative | mij, me | zijn, haar, het | ons | hun4 | jou, je | wie, wien2 |
2Obsolete
3Informal
4In spoken language and also quite often in written language, hun and hen are used interchangeably. The difference is artificial (hun and hen are in fact dialectal variants) and has been made by Renaissance grammarians with a Latin bias.
The genitive also applies to nouns:
Without an article, all nouns get -s, and the adjectives get -e for mascular and feminine. This is a very common construction.
With an article, things get a little different:
| Mascular | Feminine | Neuter determined | Neuter indetermined | Plural | |
| Noun | des (noun)(e)s | der (noun) | des (noun)(e)s | ener (noun)(e)s | der (noun) |
| Adjective | (adjective)en | (adjective)er | (adjective)en | (adjective) | der (noun) |
This construction sounds very official and formal (just like the -(e)r / -(e)s behind the pronouns) and therefore is only used in formal language (and when one wants to impress one with his knowledge of the Dutch language). This construction is used more: van de/het/een (noun), and van (pronoun). Inflection is then normal.
This is an Article on Dutch grammar. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Dutch grammar
