says…
Onze Pronoun kinderen Noun zijn Auxiliary nogal Adverb verschillend Adjective van Adposition elkaar Pronoun .
Pronoun
Noun
Auxiliary
Adverb
Adjective
Adposition
Pronoun
Our children are quite different from each other. Our children are quite different from each other .
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Words and sentences
New
onze
- inflected form of ons
- non-attributive form of ons (English: ours)
New
kinderen
plural of kind
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.
New
nogal
rather, quite
New
verschillend
-
- different
- various
New
van
-
- of (possession, property)
- of (general association)
- by, of (creator)
- from (origin)
- from (starting point of a movement or change)
- from (starting point in time)
- from, off (removal of something from off something else)
- of, out of, from, with (cause)
- of, out of, with (material or resource)
- of, out of, among (out of a larger whole; partitive)
- from, was, formerly (indicating a change in price)
- (colloquial) like (quotative (used to introduce direct speech))
New
elkaar
each other, one another