*** Proof of Product ***
Exploring the Essential Features of “Michel Thomas – Dutch Complete Course 2009”
Michel Thomas Method: Dutch Advanced Course
Els Van Geyte, Cobie Adkins-de Jong
Summary:
Learn another language the way you learnt your own
You learnt your own language naturally and enjoyably: now you can learn Dutch in the same way.
You’ll stick with it because you’ll love it
Use the unique method perfected over fifty years by the celebrated psychologist and linguist Michel Thomas.
This method works with your brain, helping you to build up your Dutch in manageable, enjoyable steps by thinking out the answers for yourself.
You learn through listening and speaking without the pressure of writing or memorising.
You pick up the language naturally and unforgettably.
The NEW Dutch Advanced Course
A five-hour, 100% audio method for taking y
- Learn another language the way you learnt your own
- Effective method – the Michel Thomas Method of language teaching works with the brain
- Motivating – live classroom situation with two students encourages you to learn with the students on the recording
- All-audio – the way you want to learn
- Pronunciation is gently – but effectively – corrected
- Reference booklet – accompanying booklet lists key phrases in English and Dutch
- Suite of progressive and complementary course components: Introductory, Foundation, Advanced and Vocabulary
- Sales record – the hugely successful Michel Thomas Method is applied to Dutch
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Stressed object pronouns: with you/with them: met jou/voor hen
Expressing possession: mine/whose: van mij, jou, van wie
Let’s, shall we: laten we, zullen we
Past plural tenses of modal verbs: mochten, zouden
Expressing specific position: to lie, to stand: liggen, staan
Positive v negative determiners: wel>niet
Phrases with fixed prepositions: I am looking forward to it: ik kijk ernaar uit
Inversion: not starting a sentences with the subject: Dat weet ik al
Starting sentences with sub-clauses: het is goed, denk ik/als je wil, wacht ik
Expressing ‘might’: ik doe het misschien
Clauses with separable verbs: I hope he’ll collect it: Ik hoop dat hij het ophaalt
Expressing ‘used to/in the past’: Alles was beter vroeger
Expressing: ‘I remember when’: Ik weet nog toen
Comparatives: better (than you): beter (dan jij)
Superlatives: het was de warmste dag
Past tense; perfect tense with ‘to have’: ik heb het gezegd/gemaakt
Pluperfect: I had learnt it: ik had het geleerd
Past participles of verbs starting with unstressed syllables, eg ‘her, ont, be’ do not have ‘ge’ in front of them
Perfect tense with detachable and non-detachable prefixes: herhaald, opgehaald
Irregular past participles (the ‘geven’ box): gegeven, gewassen
Vowel patterns in past verb forms: ‘i’ to ‘o’ beginnen>begonnen
Perfect tense with modals: ik heb het willen/kunnen/moeten/mogen doen
Pluperfect with modals: ik had het niet willen/kunnen/moeten/ mogen doen
Expressing prediction/expectation: Hij zal het (wel) doen
Passives: it is/was beautifully made: het is/ was mooi gemaakt
Two ways of expressing ‘would have’ (conditional perfect): Ik had het gevraagd/ik zou het gevraagd hebben
Expressing ‘should/need to’, using ‘moeten’: je moet het proberen
Expressing ‘should have’: je had het moeten doen
Expressing: ‘not having to/not needing to’: ‘niet hoeven te’ – je hoeft het niet te doen
Would be able /could = Ik zou het morgen kunnen kopen
Would have been able to/could have: -ik had het kunnen kopen/Would have been allowed: had mogen/Would have had to: had moeten/Would have wanted: had willen
To become/to get: ‘worden’ Het wordt warm
Past tense of worden (âbecame/gotâ): werd/werden
Perfect tense with ‘to be’ (verbs of motion, change): ik ben gegaan
Word order: ik geef het hem vs ik geef hem het boek
Polite commands: Gaat u zitten
There is: er ligt, er staat
It is/they are: het is/het zijn
Gender: het, hij
Pronouns: het, hem
Who: een man die, een kind datâŚ
Using verbs as nouns: eten (het-words)
Adjective endings after ‘a’ or no ‘a’: een leuke dag, een leuk dagje, leuke dagen
To live: wonen vs leven
Simple past (imperfect) â I lived/used to live: Ik woonde
Passive structures with ‘zijn’ and ‘worden’ e.g.: it has become â het is geworden, het wordt/werd gewassen/is gewassen.
Michel Thomas Method: Dutch Foundation Course
Cobie Adkins-de Jong, Els Van Geyte
Summary:
Learn another language the way you learnt your own
You learnt your own language naturally and enjoyably: now you can learn Dutch in the same way.
You’ll stick with it because you’ll love it
Use the unique method perfected over fifty years by the celebrated psychologist and linguist Michel Thomas.
This method works with your brain, helping you to build up your Dutch in manageable, enjoyable steps by thinking out the answers for yourself.
You learn through listening and speaking without the pressure of writing or memorising.
You pick up the language naturally and unforgettably.
The NEW Dutch Foundation Course
- Learn another language the way you learnt your own
- Effective method – the Michel Thomas Method of language teaching works with the brain
- Motivating – live classroom situation with two students encourages you to learn with the students on the recording
- All-audio – the way you want to learn
- Pronunciation is gently – but effectively – corrected
- Reference booklet – accompanying booklet lists key phrases in English and Dutch
- Suite of progressive and complementary course components: Introductory, Foundation, Advanced and Vocabulary
- Sales record – the hugely successful Michel Thomas Method is applied to Dutch
Table of Contents:
It is: âhet isâ
Asking for agreement: âhè?â
not: ânietâ
Question words: what: âwat?â
I: âikâ
I am drinking = I drink: âik drinkâ
to + verb = verb + âenâ
You: âjeâ
Yes/no questions
Question words: where: âwaarâ
Word order: trigger verbs send the 2nd verb to the end of the sentence
We: âweâ
Can/able to: âkan/kunâ
Good = well: âgoedâ
Question words: why: âwaaromâ
We: âweâ: use the full verb (with â-enâ)
How to express the present
Word order in questions
But: âmaarâ
Word order with ânietâ
Him/her/me: âhem/haar/meâ
Iâm sorry: âhet spijt meâ
Must/have to: âmoetenâ
To know: âwetenâ+ âhetâ (it)
How to express the present tense
Nothing/something: âniets/ietsâ
Because (for): âwantâ
they: âzeâ
need: ânodig hebbenâ (have needed)
Time expressions
Question words: how/what time: âhoe/hoe laatâ
How to express the future (using present tense): are you coming? = will you come? = will you be coming?: âkomâ
Patterns: words ending in â-ationâ: â-atieâ. For these words, âtheâ is âdeâ.
He/she: âhij/zeâ
Adjective endings: â-eâ
An, a: âeenâ
Plural you (you all): âjullieâ
Using âto goâ for future forms
To: ânaarâ
WhereâŚto: ânaartoeâ
Commands; softening commands with âevenâ
Polite form of âyouâ: âuâ; verb â+tâ
You, he, she, it: verb â+tâ (the t-gang: âhij, ze, het, uâ)
No â-tâ with âjeâ in question forms
Polite requests with âevenâ
All: âallemaalâ (but never used on its own)
Her: âhaarâ
Noun plurals with â-enâ
Gladly, with pleasure, like: âgraagâ
Stressed forms: you: âjijâ; she: âzijâ; they: âzijâ
Me too = I too/So do we = we too
Would like: âwil graagâ. âgraagâ stays close to the verb it belongs to. No need for âgraagâ in questions (would you like = do you want)
Add âon-â to adjectives to make negative
âwelâ for contrast; replaces the verb
To go home: ânaar huis gaanâ vs. at home: âthuisâ
Word order: time before place
Word order: no change when linking sentences with âenâ and âwantâ
Word order: âomdat-effectâ: when linking sentences with âomdatâ the verb gets sent to the end
Question words: when: âwanneerâ
Word order: question words in the middle of a sentence have the âomdatâ effect
Question words: who: âwie
Trigger verbs (send the other verb to the end): to be allowed/have permission: âmogenâ
Diminutives: making words small, talking about objects affectionately: add â-jeâ
Reflexive verbs (to feel oneself good)
Not one, not a(ny), no: âgeenâ
Expressions using âto haveâ instead of âto beâ
To (for to, in order to): âom âŚteâ
Two different words for âtheâ: âdeâ and âhetâ
In Dutch: âin het Nederlandsâ
How to express âwould/was supposed toâ: I/you/he/she/it would: âik/je/hij/ze/het zouâ
If: âalsâ (also has âomdatâ effect)
We/you (all)/they are allowed: âwe/jullie/ze mogenâ
âIfâ in English has two meanings – âin caseâ or âwhetherâ: âalsâ or âofâ
How to express âI have been âŚwaitingâ: present tense + âal/langâ
Revision of trigger verbs: can, want to, have to, be allowed
How to express the past tense
I/you/he/she/it could (was able): âik/je/u/hij/ze/het konâ
We/you (all)/they could (were able): âwe/jullie/ze kondenâ
Them: âzeâ
I /he/she/it was, you were: âik/je/u/hij/ze/het wasâ
We/you (all)/they were: âwe/jullie/ze warenâ
I /he/she/it was, you had: âik/je/u/hij/ze/het hadâ
We/you (all)/they had: âwe/jullie/ze haddenâ
Word order: ânietâ usually comes after time phrases
To wait for: âwachten opâ
I /you/he/she/it had to: âik/je/u/hij/ze/het moestâ
We/you (all)/they had to: âwe/jullie/ze moestenâ
How to express promise/commitment: I will/shall: I /you/he/she/it will: âik/je/u/hij/ze/het zalâ
We/you (all)/they will: âwe/jullie/ze zullenâ
I /you/he/she/it wanted: âik/je/u/hij/ze/het wildeâ
We/you (all)/they wanted: âwe/jullie/ze wildenâ
Words ending in â-atieâ often have corresponding verbs ending in â-erenâ: âcombinatieâ > âcombinerenâ
To let/allow: âlatenâ; to have something done: âlatenâ
Verbs that can separate have the stress on the prefix
To go away: âweggaanâ
To pick up/collect: âophalenâ
Verbs with prefixes that do not separate have the stress on the core verb
To repeat: âherhalenâ
Statements like âI hopeâ, must be followed by âthatâ: datâ
âdatâ in middle of sentence has the âomdatâeffect
To express position – on it/in it: âerop/erinâ
With it: âermeeâ
Michel Thomas Method: Dutch Introductory Course
Cobie Adkins-de Jong, Els Van Geyte
Summary:
Learn another language the way you learnt your own
You learnt your own language naturally and enjoyably: now you can learn Dutch in the same way.
You’ll stick with it because you’ll love it
Use the unique method perfected over fifty years by the celebrated psychologist and linguist Michel Thomas.
This method works with your brain, helping you to build up your Dutch in manageable, enjoyable steps by thinking out the answers for yourself.
You learn through listening and speaking without the pressure of writing or memorising.
You pick up the language naturally and unforgettably.
The NEW Dutch Introductory Course
- Learn another language the way you learnt your own
- Effective method – the Michel Thomas Method of language teaching works with the brain
- Motivating – live classroom situation with two students encourages you to learn with the students on the recording
- All-audio – the way you want to learn
- Pronunciation is gently – but effectively – corrected
- Reference booklet – accompanying booklet lists key phrases in English and Dutch
- Suite of progressive and complementary course components: Introductory, Foundation, Advanced and Vocabulary
- Sales record – the hugely successful Michel Thomas Method is applied to Dutch
Table of Contents:
It is: âhet isâ
Asking for agreement: âhè?â
not: ânietâ
Question words: what: âwat?â
I: âikâ
I am drinking = I drink: âik drinkâ
to + verb = verb + âenâ
You: âjeâ
Yes/no questions
Question words: where: âwaarâ
Word order: trigger verbs send the 2nd verb to the end of the sentence
We: âweâ
Can/able to: âkan/kunâ
Good = well: âgoedâ
Question words: why: âwaaromâ
We: âweâ: use the full verb (with â-enâ)
How to express the present
Word order in questions
But: âmaarâ
Word order with ânietâ
Him/her/me: âhem/haar/meâ
Iâm sorry: âhet spijt meâ
Must/have to: âmoetenâ
To know: âwetenâ+ âhetâ (it)
How to express the present tense
Nothing/something: âniets/ietsâ
Because (for): âwantâ
they: âzeâ
need: ânodig hebbenâ (have needed)
Time expressions
Question words: how/what time: âhoe/hoe laatâ
How to express the future (using present tense): are you coming? = will you come? = will you be coming?: âkomâ
Patterns: words ending in â-ationâ: â-atieâ. For these words, âtheâ is âdeâ.
He/she: âhij/zeâ
Adjective endings: â-eâ
An, a: âeenâ
About the Author(s):
Cobie Adkins-de Jong and Els Van Geyte are native Dutch speakers and experienced teachers of Dutch.
Cobie additionally used to teach German to adults at the Brasshouse Language Centre in Birmingham, while Els also teaches English as a Foreign Language at the University of Birmingham
Please see the full list of alternative group-buy courses available here: https://lunacourse.com/shop/