tommus wrote:Kwarktaart framboos en aardbei zijn hier absolute favoriet!
Raspberry and strawberry cheesecake are absolute favorites here!
Technically, these aren't adjectives but nouns...
tommus wrote:Kwarktaart framboos en aardbei zijn hier absolute favoriet!
Raspberry and strawberry cheesecake are absolute favorites here!
Josquin wrote:tommus wrote:Kwarktaart framboos en aardbei zijn hier absolute favoriet!
Raspberry and strawberry cheesecake are absolute favorites here!
Technically, these aren't adjectives but nouns...
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tommus wrote:Josquin wrote:tommus wrote:Kwarktaart framboos en aardbei zijn hier absolute favoriet!
Raspberry and strawberry cheesecake are absolute favorites here!
Technically, these aren't adjectives but nouns...
Interesting! Then what is "kwarktaart"? An adjective?
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tommus wrote:Natuurkunde is heel erg vreemd, maar het went.
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tommus wrote:1. Zijn dokter aanraadde onlangs hem enkele kilo’s af te vallen.
2. Zijn dokter aanraadde hem onlangs enkele kilo’s af te vallen.
3. Zijn dokter onlangs aanraadde hem enkele kilo’s af te vallen.
4. Zijn dokter onlangs hem aanraadde enkele kilo’s af te vallen.
His doctor recently advised him to lose a few kilos.
Which (if any or all) of the Dutch sentences is/are correct?
Christi wrote:Sorry I don't know what the grammatical word is for this rule
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tarvos wrote:Subordinate clauses force separable verbs back together, yes.
Christi, there are cases where you do have a preposition but the verb does NOT separate - this has to do with the fact that the stress doesn't fall on the first syllable.
Vóórkomen (to exist in a certain area) vs voorkómen (to prevent).
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