Lesson 1: Made in Holland

Welkom

Welkom! or, Welcome to this online Dutch course. We hope you will enjoy it! The idea behind this course to learn basic Dutch in a friendly community setting where you can make your interactive exercises and also contact other students by means of the forum, the chatbox or exchanging messages.

The course consists of 25 lessons (the 'lesson' buttons at the left side of your screen). Each lesson contains a small text explaining some Dutch grammar. Each lesson is accompanied by interactive vocabulary and exercises to train what you have just learned. For the interactive part you will get a score. When you scored high enough, you can proceed with the next lesson.

In total, the course contains more than 200 interactive
exercises to learn the dutch vocabulary, grammar and pronunciation!!

To get acquainted with the exercises, click on the button 'vocabulary' at the top of this page. If you click there, the first test exercise will appear. Of course, in the lessons to come the exercises will be more difficult ;) Good luck!

I have tried my utmost to write these Dutch lessons for you. Unfortunatly however, I know that my Dutch is much better than my English. So, if you have any comments on my English, feel free to contact me!!

Pronunciation reference

In this course we focus on Dutch grammar and vocabulary for reading and writing. However, some attention will be paid to the pronuncation. In this pronunciation reference, you will find the basic rules.

Consonants

The pronunciation of the Dutch consonants b, c, d, f, h, k, l, m, n, p, q, s, v, w, x and z is comparable to the English pronunciation. The consonant combinations nk and ng also appear in Dutch and are pronounced as in English. The other consonants need some further explanation:
  • j is pronouced as the y in you, and not as the j in jack!
  • the r before a vowel is pronounced as in the Spanish perro
  • the r after a vowel is pronounced as the English r, like in door
  • g is quite hard to pronounce. It is pronounced as the g in the Spanish gente
    or the ch in the german dich
  • the consonant combination ch is pronounced as the g discussed above
  • the consonant combination sch is pronounced by a s, followed by a ch as discussed above
  • the t as the english t, but pronounced as ts when a word ends with -tie
Vowels: short and long variant

The five basic vowels in Dutch are a, e, i, o and u. Each of these vowels has a short and a long variant. When to use which variant will be discussed later on. Here is the overview of these vowels:

vowels: short and long variants
aenglish dark aaenglish a but mouth more open
eenglish bread eeenglish flame
ienglish inch ieenglish feed
oenglish awful ooenglish oak
uenglish bird uu german ü or french u
try to say the ie and round your lips

In addition to these vowels, there are the following combined vowels, pronounced as follows:
  • ei as in the english mayor or why
  • ij exactly the same as ei
  • eu as in the french peu, or deux
  • oe as in the english food
  • ou as in the english house
  • au exactly the same as ou
  • ui try going from ou to eu. It's in between. Or, say an e followed by uu
  • y as in english baby

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Welcome
Welcome! The course has started!!

Contact
Send an e-mail to info@lesexpres.nl

News
23-11-2008: The website is up and running!...

Progress
1. Emese (les 13)
2. Louisa (les 12)
3. Rebecca (les 5)
4. Sam (les 4)
5. Grace (les 4)
6. Krista (les 3)
7. Ferdinand (les 2)
8. Venkateswarlu (les 2)
9. Mehr (les 2)
10. Soner (les 2)

Online
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6. Appie (O12.2, 78%)
7. Erkan (O4.2, 100%)
8. Appie (O12.1, 85%)
9. Appie (W12.3, 74%)
10. Anneke (W4.3, 81%)

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