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Tag Archives: engels

Surname prefixes

Dutch surnames often have prefixes (van, van der, de, ter, etc.) and are alphabetized by the remainder, which stops half the phone book being listed under V.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 28, 2020May 28, 2020Posted inAddressing, Advanced, Cultural, StyleTags:achternamen, Beethoven, dunglish, engels, tussenvoegsel, van Nistelrooij2 Comments on Surname prefixes

Plurals are in the mind’s eye

Singular subjects require singular verbs and plural subjects require plural verbs… except when they don’t.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 27, 2020May 27, 2020Posted inAdvanced, Grammar, Hypercorrectness, Plurals, US-UK issues, VerbsTags:aantal, dunglish, engels, gebruik meervoud, meervoud, werkwoordenLeave a comment on Plurals are in the mind’s eye

Using “a” and “an”

Whether to use “a” or “an” depends on if a vowel follows. But remember: that’s determined by the spoken sound, not the alphabetical letter.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 26, 2020May 26, 2020Posted inArticles, ElementaryTags:acroniemen, dunglish, engels, klinker1 Comment on Using “a” and “an”

Sustainability and durability

The word “duurzaam” covers two different meanings in Dutch (eco-friendly and long-lasting), so you can’t use “sustainable” as a catch-all translation.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 25, 2020Posted inAdvanced, Dual meanings, MistranslationsTags:circulair, dunglish, duurzaam, duurzaamheid, engelsLeave a comment on Sustainability and durability

The Netherlands

Um… surely not. The Dutch don’t make mistakes when referring to their own country, do they? It turns out to be a surprisingly tricky one.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 24, 2020May 31, 2020Posted inAddressing, Elementary, PluralsTags:adres, dunglish, engels, gebruik hoofdletters, gebruik meervoud, hoofdletters, NederlandLeave a comment on The Netherlands

A dull-as-ditchwater subject

A dull-as-ditchwater subject, but a not-to-be-missed topic: hyphenation of compound adjectives before nouns.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 23, 2020May 31, 2020Posted inAdvanced, Grammar, PunctuationTags:dunglish, engels, gebruik koppelteken, koppelteken2 Comments on A dull-as-ditchwater subject

Data

A singular noun. Yes, the origin of the word is the Latin plural of datum, but that’s not the point. Languages are dynamic and changing; if you don’t go with the flow, it can sound hypercorrect.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 22, 2020May 27, 2020Posted inAdvanced, Grammar, Hypercorrectness, Plurals, US-UK issuesTags:data, dataset, dunglish, engels, gebruik meervoud, gegevens, media, meervoud3 Comments on Data

In a manner, way or fashion

If you want to write English in an efficient manner, in a smart way and in a natural fashion, then don’t forget your adverbs. Do it efficiently, smartly and naturally.

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 21, 2020Posted inAdvanced, Adverbs, Grammar, Longwindedness, StyleTags:dunglish, engels, manier, op een manier, semantiek, syntaxis, wijzeLeave a comment on In a manner, way or fashion

Lowercase acronyms

English always writes its acronyms in capitals, with just a few exceptions that have escaped into the wild as normal words (such as radar, laser, snafu and scuba).

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 20, 2020May 21, 2020Posted inAdvanced, PunctuationTags:btw, dunglish, engels, html, ict, jpg, lan, led-lampje, pdf, sms, usb-stick, wanLeave a comment on Lowercase acronyms

Adequate

Would you want to be operated on by a surgeon whose skills are adequate? Or would you rather have one who’s good?

Posted byMike WilkinsonMay 19, 2020May 21, 2020Posted inAdvanced, Overused words, Wrong registerTags:adequaat, dunglish, engels, Eurospeak1 Comment on Adequate

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