ابحث بين معلمي الإنجليزية المتعددين...
Fern
S/Z; boos/bose Hi guys. I am doing an exercise that involves adding -e to words to change the spelling and I don't understand why 'boos' becomes 'bose'. I understand that 'oo' becomes 'o' because in adding -e you are changing it to an open syllable. What I don't understand is why does it not become 'boze'? Many thanks! -Fern
١٥ أكتوبر ٢٠١٣ ٢٠:٤٨
الإجابات · 3
1
In fact, it does become 'boze'. :) De vrouw is boos. - Zij is een boze vrouw. 'Wortel' becomes 'wortelen' and not 'wortellen' because the last syllable of 'wortel' is not stressed. In that case, the plural usually only gets a single consonant. You can find a more thorough explanation (in Dutch) at http://taaladvies.net/taal/advies/vraag/222/
١٧ أكتوبر ٢٠١٣
This is coming from a dutch learner (so don't take it as 100% - but nobody else answered) Regarding the boos/bose thing, a random thought - the s doesn't become a z because the word is an adjective. The S=>Z rule only applies to nouns i think. (huis-huizen) And there aren't many adjectives that end in S - The only that come to my mind are paars/paarse (used as an adjective) and fris/frisse ... As for wortel/wortelen .. i don't think there is any rule about doubling the consonant : gevoel/gevoelen ; doel/doelen ; twijfel / twijfelen ... however : aanval / aanvallen
١٧ أكتوبر ٢٠١٣
And in fact, a related question - why does 'wortel' become 'wortelen' when adding -en and not 'wortellen'?
١٥ أكتوبر ٢٠١٣
لم تجد إجاباتك بعد؟
اكتب اسألتك ودع الناطقين الأصليين باللغات يساعدونك!

لا تفوّت فرصة تعلّم لغة جديدة وأنت مرتاح في منزلك. تصفّح مجموعتنا المختارة من مدرّسي اللغات ذوي الخبرة وسجّل في درسك الأول الآن!