Dutch

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Dutch is the official language of the Netherlands, Belgium (called Flemish), Netherlands Antilles, Indonesia, and parts of France and Germany. It did not go through the High German Consonant Shift so many of the vocabulary in it still resemble other related languages such as Low German and even English.

Dutch
Nederlands
Spoken in: Netherlands (Nederland)
Conworld: Real world
Total speakers: 23 million native.
Genealogical classification: Indo-European
Germanic
West Germanic
    
Dutch
Basic word order: SVO, OVS/V2
Morphological type: Inflecting
Morphosyntactic alignment: nominative-accusative
Writing system:
Created by:
unknown 16th century C.E,

History

Dutch Phonology and Orthography

Consonants

Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Alveolar Post-alv. Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Plosive p b t d k g
Fricative f v s z ʃ ç x (ɣ) h
Approximants ʋ j
Trill r
Lateral Approximant l
  • Most Dutch consonants are pronounced the same way as their IPA equivalents: b, p, j, f, k, z, m, n, h, s, t, d, l and r.
  • sj is pronounced /ʃ/.
  • g and ch is pronounced /x/. g can sometimes be realised as /ɣ/.
  • sch is pronouced /sx/ and not /ʃ/ as in German.
  • w is pronounced as /ʋ/.
  • v is sometimes pronounced /f/.
  • Dutch has final devoicing. This means that all voiced consonants with voiceless forms become those voiceless forms, at the end of the word.

Vowels

Monothongs

Vowels
Front Central Back
Unround Rounded Unrounded Rounded
High i - ɪ yː - ʏ u
Mid eː - ɛ øː - ə oː - ɔ
Low aː - a
All entries save low are: Tense - Lax
  • Vowels are formed based on the ideas of Closed vs. Open syllables. In closed syllable, the vowel is lax and/or short. In an open syllable or a closed syllable written with a geminated vowel, the vowel is tense and/or long.

Diphthongs

Grammar

Nouns

Gender

Dutch historically had three genders, much the way High German still does. However, most of the Masculine and Feminine nouns merged into a Common gender. This leaves Common and Neuter, which are the two genders of Dutch today.

Number

Articles

There are two types of articles in Dutch, Definite and Indefinite. The definite article has two forms, de and het. The definite article de is used for the common gender, and het is used for the neuter gender. The plural for both is de.

The indefinite article is een for all genders and is reduced to 'n in informal sense. The negative geen is used for both numbers and all genders to indicate "not" (comparative to High German Kein).

Adjectives and Adverbs

Adjectives

Adverbs

Pronouns

Prepositions

Conjunctions

Verbs

Present

Simple Past

Compound Past

Future

Passive

Modals and Auxiliaries

Word Order

Texts

Sources and external links