kurt vdv
langzaam or langzame?? I had a quiz and I had to translate "It is a slow sheep" and "It is a slow turtle" from English to Dutch. I wrote "langzaam" for both but then afterward I thought I might have been wrong and that I should have used "langzame" for both. I got "Het is een langzaam schaap" as correct but "Het is een langzaam schildpad" was marked wrong. Why is one "langzaam" and the other "langzame"?? Also was I correct in assessing that "langzame" would have been right??
18 mei 2018 10:57
Antwoorden · 5
2
You have to determine whether the noun is a de-word or het-word AND whether you have a definite or indefinite article before the adjective. The pattern is then as follows: Definite + de-word -> adjective gets an e (de langzame schildpad) Definite + het-word -> adjective gets an e (het langzame schaap) Indefinite + de-word -> adjective gets an e (een langzame schildpad) Indefinite + het-word -> in this case there is NO extra e (een langzaam schaap)
18 mei 2018
1
And of course, an adjective at the end of a sentence does not get an e (de schildpad/het schaap is langzaam)
18 mei 2018
That is a great question! I have noticed that some adjectives change while others do not, but I do not know the reasoning. Hopefully someone will answer this for you... and me.
18 mei 2018
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!