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Animals
Words and sentences
New
je
-
- subjective unstressed form of jij (“you (singular)”)
- objective unstressed form of jij (“you (singular)”)
- subjective unstressed form of jullie (“you (plural), y'all”)
- objective unstressed form of jullie (“you (plural), y'all”)
- (informal) one, people, you, someone, anyone; an unspecified individual or group of individuals (as subject or object)
- (colloquial) I, one; used to talk about oneself indirectly, especially about feelings or personal experiences
New
hebt
- inflection of hebben:
- inflection of hebben:
- (dialectal) third-person singular present indicative of hebben
New
en
-
- and
- well, so
- plus, and
New
slangen
plural of slang
New
die
-
- that (masculine, feminine); referring to a thing or a person further away.
- those (plural); referring to things or people further away.
- (colloquial) a certain, a particular; some; this; referring to a thing or a person invisible or unknown to the audience.
New
giftig
poisonous, venomous, toxic
New
wurgen
to strangle, to strangulate
New
zijn
-
- To be, to exist.
- Used to connect a noun to an adjective that describes it.
- Used to form the perfect tense of the active voice of some verbs, together with a past participle.
- Used to form the perfect tense of the active voice of some verbs, together with a past participle. Note: The perfect tense of most other verbs is formed using hebben.
- Used to form the perfect tense of the passive voice, together with a past participle.
- Used to form the perfect tense of the passive voice, together with a past participle. Note: The imperfect tense passive is formed using worden.
- Used to form the continuous forms of various tenses, together with aan het or, in archaic style, with a present participle.
- To go, to go on a trip and return.
- Used to indicate weather, temperature or some other general condition.
- to be, to equal, to total, to amount to; used to indicate that the values on either side of an equation are the same.