Are the Dutch really that good in English? - EF EPI 2019

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  • čas přidán 10. 11. 2019
  • Our vlogger Bastiaan went on the streets and asked expats and tourists whether the Dutch are really good in English and if so, why.
    The Netherlands recently became number 1 in the EF EPI (English Proficiency Index). The test was conducted by more than 2.3 million people worldwide and measures the English level of people in countries where English isn't their native language, and as said before, the Dutch rank number 1.
    Want to know more about EF? Order our free brochure www.ef.com/brochure

Komentáře • 203

  • @garytulie8567
    @garytulie8567 Před 3 lety +78

    As well as the education system, I believe the good English spoken in the Netherlands is due to the amount of English language television - put out with sub-titles rather than dubbed into Dutch. Scandinavians have the same advantage, and also mostly speak excellent English.

    • @RicoLee27
      @RicoLee27 Před 2 lety +2

      And its easy to learn cause Emglish is our brother langauge. And way easier then German

    • @gertvanderstraaten6352
      @gertvanderstraaten6352 Před rokem +4

      Indubitably. I'm old enough to have grown up in the eastern part of the Netherlands where we had 5 tv channels, 3 of the German and the German ones were also broadcasing in the (Saturday and Sunday) afternoon with a lot of children's programs. They dub everything, so everything was German and mostly the accent of the neighboring region. So I learned German-accent German early on. And then Ducht tv had a lot of English movies and tv, so Iearned some of that. Before I officially learned it in school (along with French), I already had a basis. Plus a lot of music in English (and German and French) helped too.

    • @bchkvlad
      @bchkvlad Před rokem +2

      @@RicoLee27 nee hoor, ik ben niet gelijk met U. Ik kwam naar Nederland en heeft geleerd Nederlands gevoon van "straat ". dus geen school of so iets en daar ben ik heel trots van!
      Maar Nederlands en Duits zijn meer dichter dan Nederlands en Engels! Dat zeker so! Graag te horen van U, als bent U niet gelijk met mijn en sorry voor foutjes. Laatste keer was ik in Nederland in 2002. Maar ik van Nederland 😍💘

    • @evihippogrief772
      @evihippogrief772 Před rokem

      @@bchkvlad Wat goed dat u het zo hebt kunnen leren, mij zou het niet lukken waarschijnlijk. Wel kunt u de "u" gewoon als kleine letter schrijven, en in plaats van "ik ben niet gelijk met u" kunt u beter "ik ben het niet eens met u" zeggen. Ook is de ik-vorm van hebben "heb" en als laatste een paar kleine typefoutjes denk ik. Veel geluk nog met de taal te leren (:

    • @leandrogabrielsalviagarram9224
      @leandrogabrielsalviagarram9224 Před měsícem

      All small countries whose official language is only spoken in their country and is relatively hard for foreigners to understand, are at a certain degree forced to learn english, this also happens with all the Balcanic countries.

  • @cnacma
    @cnacma Před 3 lety +96

    I’ve met several Dutch people here in America, and their English was so good I couldn’t even tell until I had talked to them for awhile and heard the slightest accent.

    • @user-ie6jr4bg1w
      @user-ie6jr4bg1w Před 3 lety +4

      But americans their English is not good so you can’t compare

    • @jorisk.2915
      @jorisk.2915 Před 2 lety +14

      @@user-ie6jr4bg1w u drunk

    • @milesfs.
      @milesfs. Před 2 lety

      @@jorisk.2915 are you?

    • @olajong2315
      @olajong2315 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jorisk.2915 I mean our former and current president can't even be understood so, understandable.

  • @macmartin86
    @macmartin86 Před rokem +4

    Many people don't realize this, but it's not the school system that provides good ways to learn English, it's the Dutch subtitles and original English/American audio in series and movies thta we watch and when growing up that subconsciously makes us more proficient at English.

  • @flyingfox7854
    @flyingfox7854 Před 3 lety +24

    We have 2 families in the Netherlands that are very good friends we have been over to stay with both of them over the years and all of them speak excellent English especially the younger members of the families also when we have been out with them for a meal in a restaurant etc as soon as the waiter/waitress realised we were English they instantly switched to English to explain the menu etc, nearly all were happy to practice their English on actual English people, I must mention the fact that most of the restaurants we went to were out in the country side away from the big tourist cities, we were very surprised by the amount of people who spoke our language with ease and fluency, one of our friends (Frank) who is in his late 40’s had never used his English language skills since he left school and when we first met him his English was quite limited but he was so excited to meet us and to use his long lost skill that his English is now (with the exception of a couple of pronunciation corrections now and then) excellent, when he comes over to England to visit us he’s always eager to visit our pubs and try out the beer and his English on the locals.

  • @sukie584
    @sukie584 Před rokem +2

    My brother lives in Amsterdam & I’m over there a lot. I’ve not met a teenager or adult that didn’t speak English. Senior adults were hit or miss. Kids, about twenty years ago, didn’t speak it, but today, they mostly do. And The Dutch speak it really well.

  • @amerikawoche8243
    @amerikawoche8243 Před 3 lety +12

    Their quality of English is excellent and the tone has a certain sing-song pitch which is quite pleasing. Scandinavians do the same, but I find their frequencies tend to go higher, whereas in NL it is more mid-range based. What some folks find jarring at first is the native gh sound in NL - there is some harshness to it, but its raw intensity provides nice contrast to thoroughly amicable people.

    • @mariadebake5483
      @mariadebake5483 Před 2 lety

      That's because rythm is extremely important in dutch sentences. Speaking English we tend to use the same rythm as we do in speaking dutch

  • @Roozyj
    @Roozyj Před 2 lety +6

    I remember going to the USA and speaking English there when I was 14. My cousins asked me what language we spoke at home, with our friends and found it hard to believe that Dutch was actually our native language. Not sure if they were just being young and silly, or if our English was convincing enough though xD

  • @darren6076
    @darren6076 Před 2 lety +4

    One of my favourite places so different and friendly. Can honestly say I was shocked how everyone speaks English even in supermarkets what’s normally a nightmare if you can’t speak the language but in Amsterdam it was like shopping back in the uk.

  • @wendellangeler7538
    @wendellangeler7538 Před 4 lety +30

    heeft sowieso te maken met ons schoolsysteem. Leer nu al 9 jaar lang Engels en ben 17... ik kan me makkelijk in mijn eentje redden in het Engels. Toen ik van de basisschool afkwam gingen zelfs kinderen van groep 3 al Engels leren. Ze konden nog niet eens Nederlands schrijven, een goede verandering, als je het mij vraagt.

    • @myrthelensink4679
      @myrthelensink4679 Před 3 lety +4

      ik heb mezelf engels geleerd haha maby that is the reason why my english is so fkd up hahahaaaa

    • @martspil9848
      @martspil9848 Před 3 lety +2

      Het is ook voor een groot deel dat de media in Nederland weinig vertaald wordt, hierdoor als je tv kijkt zul je veel Engels tegenkomen waarvan je het ook leert. Ik kon zelf al Engels voordat ik het kreeg op de basisschool.

    • @hiddescherphof6064
      @hiddescherphof6064 Před 3 lety +1

      @@myrthelensink4679 Ik zit sinds dit jaar zelf in het onderwijs, en je merkt echt dat sommige leerlingen een paar jaar op het curriculum voorlopen, omdat ze Engelse films/muziek/games hebben

    • @Widdekuu91
      @Widdekuu91 Před 3 lety +4

      Dat is sarcasme toch? Engels leren voordat je Nederlands leert? Je eigen taal niet eens meer begrijpen, omdat je dan internationaal kunt gaan werken?

    • @wendellangeler7538
      @wendellangeler7538 Před 3 lety

      @@Widdekuu91 Zolang Nederlands niet vergeten wordt vind ik het oprecht geen slechte ontwikkeling. Ben niet heel nationalistisch ingesteld, misschien dat we daarom deels van mening verschillen ;).

  • @lmusima3275
    @lmusima3275 Před rokem +1

    You guys are very good at English. I’m from the UK and visited The Netherlands 🇳🇱 recently. The good news is I’m learning Dutch for the purpose of connecting more with the locals, reading 📖 and listening. I’m learning German which I know a bit more than Dutch.

  • @parmentier7457
    @parmentier7457 Před 3 lety +10

    About 10 years ago I went on vacation to Canada with my family. In a restaurant we got into conversation with a Canadian family. When we said we were from Holland they wondered why we speak English so well?

  • @wl03bu
    @wl03bu Před 2 lety +2

    Dutch people learn English when they are young. In many big cities in English speaking countries, many people learned English as a second language so in a lot of ways I found the Dutch had more proficient English than here in Toronto.

  • @bvn0111
    @bvn0111 Před 2 lety +6

    Yeah definitely Dutch people are very good speaking English. I lived almost five years in the Netherlands, and never had any trouble communicating, the down side though, I wasn't able to practice my Dutch that well

  • @Njx063
    @Njx063 Před 3 lety +1

    I made a friend that lives in France a couple of years ago. She moved from England to France for a bigger house or smt, but anyways she told me ab her English teacher at her school (I have no idea why she's even in that class) and how the teacher tried to have a conversation with her in English, but apparently she didn't speak English that well for an English teacher lol. Also when her grandma went to visit her in France, she was soooo happy that she met me, because I was the only non-french person that actually spoke English very well.

  • @Doing_Time
    @Doing_Time Před rokem +1

    My anecdotal experience with native Dutch people:
    Pronunciation...not quite right, but better than scotland, ireland, north carolina, australia, alabama, arkansas, nyc, india, manila, boston, montreal...
    Grammar...probably about a 3rd grade level on average, which is fluent
    American idioms...surprisingly fluent

  • @johanvandenbroek9874
    @johanvandenbroek9874 Před 3 lety +10

    Tv is de reden, alles was in t Engels met Nederlandse ondertiteling, de laatste 20 jaar is het niveau van kinderen 2 t/m 5 langzaam aan het dalen door het grotere aanbod van na-gesynchroniseerde peuter series

    • @tinyme2139
      @tinyme2139 Před 3 lety +2

      Klopt ! Ik heb nooit Engels geleerd op de lagere school ,maar het geleerd via tv en singletjes , die je dan fonetisch op schreef .
      Later op de huishoud school kregen we wel Engels en kreeg daar meestal negens of tienen .
      Toen mijn dochter heel klein was , leerde ik haar Engelse woordjes spelende wijs en dat ging haar goed af .
      Ik ben het met je eens dat na-synchroniseren niet echt goed is, kinderen , vooral jong, pakken het snel op !

    • @classesanytime
      @classesanytime Před 3 lety +1

      Al in de jaren 70 was alles al in het Engels op tv !!

  • @janfeelders5733
    @janfeelders5733 Před rokem +1

    I have a Co-worker from England, living 25 years in the Netherlands.
    But he can not speak Dutch, because 99% of the people in the Netherlands speaks perfectly English.
    And I have a Co-worker from Syria, living 3 years in the Netherlands and speak perfectly Dutch, because nobody speaks Syrian overhere.

  • @Rolando_Cueva
    @Rolando_Cueva Před 3 lety +84

    Are the subs even needed? Everyone in Amsterdam knows English lol.

    • @yoman2854
      @yoman2854 Před 3 lety

      Lol

    • @avityyq
      @avityyq Před 3 lety +8

      You mean the Netherlands -_-
      Amsterdam is our capital

    • @_exulqnsis_3729
      @_exulqnsis_3729 Před 3 lety +7

      *I hate it when people call our country "Amsterdam" just like you said, IT'S OUR DARN CAPITAL!*

    • @marcelaandreacastrillonbui7951
      @marcelaandreacastrillonbui7951 Před 2 lety +2

      Everyone thinks Netherlands is Amsterdam. Netherlands is more than Amsterdam. 😅Amsterdam is just a city and not all dutch people speak English…

    • @Pedro-ds3cq
      @Pedro-ds3cq Před 2 lety

      True lol

  • @bastiannicholls7692
    @bastiannicholls7692 Před 3 lety +1

    my answer is YESSSS and I love the accent!!

  • @olajong2315
    @olajong2315 Před 3 lety +83

    In France, they know English they just pretend not to understand you lol

    • @brolintoro2157
      @brolintoro2157 Před 3 lety +3

      Why should they speak Englishm though?

    • @raikozy35
      @raikozy35 Před 3 lety +11

      I think French people / government generally have the tendency to protect their language from being contaminated by other languages. They are especially against the english language. So it's partly they don't know how to speak it but more importantly, many refused to learn it. I mean I'm from Canada and a lot of people from the Quebec side of the country doesn't really like english / wants to protect their language. Quite understandable though because that province is surrounded by English Canada + US. I'm only one of the few hundred thousand Canadian who can actually understand both and speak relatively well but the majority of us can't. The majority of Canadians are billinguals though, but just not english and french, usually english or french paired with some other languages (due to immigration).

    • @axelusul
      @axelusul Před 3 lety

      @@raikozy35 I think you may be right, as shown by French Canadian and Vichy French. They were prepared to speak German with a French accent.

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti Před 3 lety +1

      @@brolintoro2157 Because it's a world language?

    • @-Kenny--
      @-Kenny-- Před 2 lety

      @@brolintoro2157 😶

  • @fabiofortuna182
    @fabiofortuna182 Před 2 lety +3

    i live in the North of the country, in a little village in the Groningen province, and many people here do not even speak standard Dutch, let alone English, I find that extremely frustrating. I can speak Dutch, but I use it only when I go to Groningen or other parts of the Netherlands, cause here most people answer me in the local dialect. I think it really depends on which part of the Netherlands one comes from. As many people have mentioned here, The Netherlands is not just the capital and the Randstad

  • @frisianmouve
    @frisianmouve Před 3 lety +4

    When I learned that the English Harry potter books came out months earlier when I was 12 I started reading them instead, that helped more than English schooling. It was a bit weird at first because who's this Dumbledore guy? Only to realize later on it was Perkamentus

  • @JaimeeTyrell
    @JaimeeTyrell Před 3 měsíci

    I don’t think it’s our education system. I think it’s because we use subtitles in stead of dubbing everything.
    And Dutch and English are also pretty similar.
    We are such a tiny country that we relied on trading for many centuries. So therefore we also needed to speak English.

  • @shaungordon9737
    @shaungordon9737 Před 3 lety +35

    The Dutch are good at English, but the Scandinavians are just as good

    • @FRLLFC
      @FRLLFC Před 3 lety +4

      I agree! I travelled to Swedish Lapland and everyone in Sweden speaks very good English and I think it's not different in Denmark, Norway and Finland.

    • @Inbal_Feuchtwanger
      @Inbal_Feuchtwanger Před 2 lety +2

      Yes Stockholm really impressed me. Even more because their language is so much different as compared to Dutch which is a lot closer to English than Swedish is.

    • @i.k.8868
      @i.k.8868 Před 2 lety +3

      Perhaps in reading, writing and vocabulary, but their accent is more removed from most (southern) UK accents. As far as intelligibility I would rank Dutch-English first, then German-English, then Swedish-English, Norwegian-English... And unfortunately no one understands Danish people, whatever language they claim to speak.

    • @gevoel8293
      @gevoel8293 Před 2 lety +1

      It is also the closest language to English. It should be the best. Why are people so surpised! Dumb Fuckers!

  • @edsonbolanos7580
    @edsonbolanos7580 Před 2 lety

    I studied In Amsterdam when I was too younger and officially English in The Netherlands comes naturally.
    Thanks to this Beauty nation I got the facilities to know English.

  • @i.k.8868
    @i.k.8868 Před 2 lety +2

    English is not taught in primary schools. At least it wasn't back in the 90s. Perhaps they have a few classes nowadays. But all the English we knew was from watching TV without subtitles (usually the subs were off by half an hour or so) and playing with computers... By the time I got English at school around age 12 I was already fluent in different English dialects.

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před rokem +1

      I had English classes in the last two years of primary school, in the late 80s.

    • @i.k.8868
      @i.k.8868 Před rokem +1

      @@13tuyuti It really depends on the school, I guess. I went to two public primary schools in Utrecht in the mid-90, and both schools did not have English language education. In one school we did sing some songs in English (and other languages), though.

  • @nickybookz222
    @nickybookz222 Před 3 lety +12

    Do not forget that many Dutch words are used in the English language. Sometimes written slightly differently, but the origin of the word is Dutch. This applies even more to the English American language. Simple example The Yankees (famous New York baseball team) is actually JanKees. Bluff (Bluffen) Bundle (Bundel) Candy (Candij) etc. The words often sound the same too, phonetically almost the same. And we are travel-loving people and this for centuries, so that people have left something everywhere (not always well think of the words and the meaning apartheid and slave, we have unfortunately also left these words and their content)

    • @rypsterhc8673
      @rypsterhc8673 Před 2 lety

      Not the vocabulary, for a Spanish speaker or French speaker is easier to identify words than a dutch speaker.

    • @mavadelo
      @mavadelo Před 2 lety +1

      Iknew of many of thewords (other examples would be cookie, kielhaulen, boss) but candy was a new one for me... but seeing it it is soooo obvious lol.

    • @droneshotsantoine1805
      @droneshotsantoine1805 Před 2 lety

      You would think that would make it easier, but because it is so similar, you will confuse it if you make it in English as a Dutch person. However, it does make it easier to understand English..

    • @gertvanderstraaten6352
      @gertvanderstraaten6352 Před rokem

      Yankees is probably not from JanKees but Jannekens as in soldiers (Johnnie soldier)

    • @nicholasthorn1539
      @nicholasthorn1539 Před rokem

      The very word that we English (and no doubt others) use to describe ourselves, i.e. aloof, is itself of Dutch origin

  • @pbhoulden8212
    @pbhoulden8212 Před 3 lety +5

    I chat with a young Dutch guy on Tinder and WhatsApp and his English is excellent. He's very fluent and says he speaks English better than German, which is interesting. Dutch is basically a cousin language to both English and German.

  • @peteymax
    @peteymax Před 9 měsíci

    The Spanish person said they’re terrible in Spain, then proceeds to speak English better and a clearer accent than host. The Scottish guy has a really beautiful accent, but in truth he did of course know that the interviewer was not a native speaker as his Dutch accent is quite strong.

  • @mistahl87
    @mistahl87 Před 3 lety +3

    I walk allot outside and I see my neighbours allot.
    This Polish guy who lives near me, always greets me when we see eachother (in English).
    But after 5+ years of this, I started thinking.
    This guy lives in this country for 5+ years and still he doesn't greet/speak to me in Dutch.
    Now I just speak all in Dutch, I don't really care if he understand it or not. (Don't get me wrong I like the guy. He's nice)But if I were to live in Poland, I would do my best to speak Polish.

    • @ganymedes62
      @ganymedes62 Před rokem

      When I hear people speak Polish, or see a Polish numberplate, I'll just say dzien dobry 🙂 It'll surprise them when they then learn I'm actually Dutch. Of course, the only reason I (still) know a little Polish is because I went on holiday there with my parents a few years in a row back in the 70's. It also helped during a recent visit to Prague as Czech is quite similar to Polish 🙂

  • @NaggersandJoggers
    @NaggersandJoggers Před 2 lety +1

    Dutch people have a great education system and they like to travel. So if they learn english they can communicate in many countries. Also they have very nice accent

  • @nekomasteryoutube3232
    @nekomasteryoutube3232 Před 2 lety

    I dunno if I'll ever have the money to travel but one thing I'd like to do is see the country side of countries, and not just the cities.
    Can I get by with just speaking english in the Dutch Country side or should I learn some dutch for the Rural people?
    (Problem with me learning languages is that its hard for me to remember complex things as someone with ADHD)

  • @pologolfpolott1096
    @pologolfpolott1096 Před 3 lety +4

    Have spent some time here in Australia in hostels in the tropics and met many people from the Netherlands. Their English is great but they tend to slur. As tourists in hostels are permanently drunk and drunk people slur.....
    Drunk Dutch people are incomprehensible.

  • @BushraAhmed-sv6ey
    @BushraAhmed-sv6ey Před 3 lety +8

    Nice video, I was born in Leeuwarden but raised in Zwolle. I used to have English back in primary and high school. I have met many Dutch people that dont speak English at all, but also I met a few people that do speak English. I moved to the UK when I was 15 and I was able to improve my English a bit more. Yes the Netherlands has definitely the best education system hence why Dutch people speak English very well!

    • @walterbravohill1130
      @walterbravohill1130 Před měsícem

      Niet waar. Don't generalise please. Not everyone speaks English well in NL.

  • @Robbiewa-bg4lu
    @Robbiewa-bg4lu Před 2 měsíci

    Absolutely the Dutch are the top for speaking English.

  • @Nwk843
    @Nwk843 Před 7 měsíci

    I'm always in contact with Dutch men and women who speak English, sometimes I even sleep listening to them speak it, it's beautiful, they have a native level even better than natives, they speak even better than natives, they study English, they are addicted to English and there is no regionalism in their language. Not their English, look, English is full of dialects and languages and versions of English too. Dutch, Swedes, Frisians, Norwegians and Icelanders and Danes should compete to see who has the best English as a playful lady. Italians use a lot of English, even too much of their own language. I also get lost with the Italians, they explain beautiful interpretive English, they beat the natives because they apply the international phonetic alphabet in English. Others do this too, and these guys have another level of English. They encourage you to speak, they excite you and encourage you to speak English even if you are a non-native and just a basic and interpretative level of explanation, they even like to help, of course, people today have to speak international English like Dutch to be understood. In France, it's horrible, most people don't want to speak English and culturally they are left behind, but the French who speak English have good native or almost native language, but there are very few of them, but when you think about it, they also help you a lot with communication, but France and Germany They do need to improve their communication in English. hugs to everyone.

  • @sledgehog1
    @sledgehog1 Před 2 lety

    Uk, Ireland, Scandinavia, Netherlands and Portugal.

  • @ronaldvanderstam8662
    @ronaldvanderstam8662 Před 3 lety +10

    I had a funny moment in the USA. There an american reacted on my english. He said that my English was better than his. On which I replied that he did not spoke English but American. ;)

  • @llVIU
    @llVIU Před 2 lety +1

    I'd say about 50-75% of them speak english. Roughly. So if you got a group of 5 people, at least 1-2 will speak it. The key is in the numbers.

  • @user-ii9xh5lz6u
    @user-ii9xh5lz6u Před 2 lety +1

    Ok I was born in Germany but raised in Landgraff , Nederlands . My parents are American. People always ask me why I only know basic Dutch. Well honestly I know 100 percent I can travel to my favorite country and speak english without a worry. I will take it upon myself to brush up on Dutch but they are shocked when I speak it 😂😂😂

    • @asaasa7900
      @asaasa7900 Před rokem

      Okay but... Did you really have to get the name of your own country wrong :(

  • @mlee-w664
    @mlee-w664 Před 2 lety +4

    3:25 Does the Scottish guy not think Scotland's in Europe?

    • @johnstuart4914
      @johnstuart4914 Před 2 lety +2

      All of us Scots know that Scotland is part of South America

  • @Leviwosc
    @Leviwosc Před 3 měsíci

    The Dutch speak English fairly well. But there's still a lot of room for improvement. I say this as a native Dutchman. Perhaps I'm too demanding, but I studied at teacher-training college and I still recall my very first lesson extremely well. My professor was a former professional translator and interpreter for the EU parliament. She spent over 45 minutes making clear to us how awful and unjustifiably overconfident the Dutch are about their language skills. After that lesson, I hardly dared to speak in English while she was around. But she really spoke impeccable English and she loved it to correct native English speakers.

  • @Yiran
    @Yiran Před 2 lety +1

    I find it very funny that the Scandinavians brought Anglo-Saxon to England, and boy now English is spread all over Northern Europe

  • @patrick-bu3eq
    @patrick-bu3eq Před 11 měsíci

    In het VK spreken ze overigens meer talen dan alleen het Engels.. Pak maar is een trein vanuit Engeland richting Wales met geluk heb je gelijk een trein die in het tweetalig is anders zie je het wel bij aankomst op station dat bordjes etc allemaal tweetalig is.

  • @edmundprice5276
    @edmundprice5276 Před 3 lety +5

    You do tend to slur some vowels and consonants, but, other than that, its perfect

    • @Widdekuu91
      @Widdekuu91 Před 3 lety +2

      Well, I mean, thats an accent.

  • @saborivaille1258
    @saborivaille1258 Před 3 lety +2

    I love the sound of Italians speaking English

  • @axelusul
    @axelusul Před 3 lety +17

    Dutch are best for English, plus we arguably were taken over by Dutch by William of Orange. LOL

    • @arjenb8403
      @arjenb8403 Před 3 lety +2

      officially the UK is still part of the Netherlands but the world is not agreeing with it :P

    • @axelusul
      @axelusul Před 3 lety

      @@arjenb8403 True, or the Netherlands is part of Great Britain. LOL

    • @arjenb8403
      @arjenb8403 Před 3 lety

      @@axelusul ask The Ruyter, he'll tell you the right answer

    • @axelusul
      @axelusul Před 3 lety

      @@arjenb8403 Thanks is he Ruyter de Hair the famous actor. LOL

    • @arjenb8403
      @arjenb8403 Před 3 lety +1

      @@axelusul Michiel de Ruyter xd

  • @wirovanas3317
    @wirovanas3317 Před 3 lety +2

    Dat omdat alle films en series gewoon in het Engels zijn, met ondertiteling.

  • @m.-9615
    @m.-9615 Před 2 lety

    It's more the influence from English media than the education system really. You learn a language by using it. Nowadays you'll find Dutch kids, like elementary school age, speak English pretty fluently because of the internet.

  • @antimonycup7066
    @antimonycup7066 Před 2 lety

    It's not the school system, it's not the 'trading nation', it's subbing not dubbing.

  • @karpatyaliroy6002
    @karpatyaliroy6002 Před 2 lety +1

    And I think they are a little overselfassured, which is the main reason for Dunglish. For example the other day I went to my son’s school for the first “intake” and we discussed his school “traject”

  • @Tweeteketje
    @Tweeteketje Před 2 lety +2

    I've been in Sweden, the people I met spoke amazingly well English. Also their accent was very good, often sounding like a native speaker (American or UK), and much better than the Dunglish I often hear (like Rutte).

  • @brolintoro2157
    @brolintoro2157 Před 3 lety +5

    It's cool knowing other languages, but why do people in the Netherlands take such pride in speaking English? What is so good about it?

    • @Widdekuu91
      @Widdekuu91 Před 3 lety +4

      I honestly would prefer it if the people learned Dutch before they were taught English.
      I honestly can't stand the half-Dutch/half-English trend that's going on in here right now.
      People going; 'Jaaa, dus ik zeg, like, zegmaar van, zo awkward en zij is like echt really pissed, weetjewel en omygod, ik vond het echt superstrange dat dit zo ongelofelijk out of nowhere kwam."
      Whereas the Dutch version would be; 'Jaaaa, dus ik zei, weetje, zegmaar; 'Oh wat ongemakkelijk zeg!" en zij werd daar echt heel boos om, weetjewel en o mijn god, ik vond het echt heel erg vreemd dat dit zo plotseling uit het niets kwam."

    • @mariadebake5483
      @mariadebake5483 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Widdekuu91 You're so totally right....

  • @julienschaar9831
    @julienschaar9831 Před 2 lety

    Het is soms zelfs als franstalige belg met een goeie kennis van het nederlands in de Nederlands moeilijk nederlands te praten: je krijgt vaak een aantwoord in het engels!!

  • @MartijnHover
    @MartijnHover Před rokem

    I suppose not, because grammatically the caption of this video should read: "Are the Dutch really that good AT English?" 🤣

  • @timb2206
    @timb2206 Před 3 lety +4

    denk dat het ook is dat we veel tv shows zien in het engels en dat ze niet ingesproken worden in het nederlands

    • @Harry_PP030
      @Harry_PP030 Před 3 lety

      Precies dat. En in andere landen wordt vooral muziek uitgezonden in de eigen taal. In Nederland hoor je vooral veel engelstalige (en buitenlandse) muziek.

    • @hds66nl29
      @hds66nl29 Před 3 lety

      Ik denk dat het een combinatie is, je leert Engels op school, die basis gebruik je om je woordenschat makkelijker op te bouwen via series, films etc.

  • @walterbravohill1130
    @walterbravohill1130 Před měsícem

    Some people are good at it but not everyone. It depens!

  • @johankleinentink3410
    @johankleinentink3410 Před 3 lety

    English learning for kids already start at Kindergarten

  • @airzulu2733
    @airzulu2733 Před 3 lety +1

    Absolutely the best are the Dutch in english .

  • @tsaicheng6159
    @tsaicheng6159 Před 2 lety

    It's true and undoubtful, both language are so close related to the same root, which is the North Sea Germanic language. So why question about how good they are good in English?

  • @remizu2901
    @remizu2901 Před 2 lety +2

    Do you think it would be possible to live in the netherlands just with knowing english

    • @PaulVoorberg
      @PaulVoorberg Před 2 lety +1

      Yes it is, that exact question is answered by Dutch people on the street here: czcams.com/video/XlWD8GuQ8Mg/video.html (at the end there's also an Indian guy who lives in the netherlands speaking about his experience with english here)
      I am Dutch and can also confirm that yes it's very possible to live in the netherlands just with knowing english.

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před rokem

      Many people do. I have even come across people who managed to land a job as a waiter without knowing Dutch.

  • @Silly_comb
    @Silly_comb Před 2 lety

    They speak american english or british?

  • @dante393
    @dante393 Před rokem

    Then I must have had a different experience here in Rotterdam. I'm originally from Aruba, there we speak 4 languages (Papiamento, Dutch, English and Spanish). When I moved to the Netherlands to study abroad in college (HBO) I have met a lot of native and non-native students. From what I can recall, the non-natives spoke English better than the natives. The natives student had a lot of trouble speaking english or their pronounciation weren't that good. So to my suprise I came across this video and couldn't believe it.
    I must say that the only city where I heard native people speaking fluent English is, in Amsterdam, all of the cashiers at the markets or shopping centre speaks English because of how many clients (tourists) they recieve on a daily basis.
    Not shaming anyone, just flabbergasted about the video and with my experiences during my college times.

  • @conanbui7960
    @conanbui7960 Před 2 lety

    Do European speak British accent or American accent?

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před rokem

      Kind of a mix. At school they try to teach us British but then we pick up an accent from American TV shows. And of course most of us still have a bit of an accent that comes from our native language.

  • @mishka3284
    @mishka3284 Před 2 lety

    or because Dutch and English are very closely related

  • @karpatyaliroy6002
    @karpatyaliroy6002 Před 2 lety +1

    I have been living in the Netherlands for 8 months, maybe because I live in a small town, I have never experienced all these positive things everybody mentioned about the Dutch people’s English. They have an accentnot strong but they do, you can hear it especially when they are articulating the v, s and sh sounds- one man told me about Covid test and we were standing next to a vending machine and I thought he was talking about the coffee taste. Also, maybe again in the town I’m living, many people can speak the basic phrases and when the conversation gets deeper they mske a lot of mistakes and can’t even find the correct words.

    • @mavadelo
      @mavadelo Před 2 lety +2

      I know exactly the accent you talk about, sadly I am suffering a great deal from it. Difference with other countries is that we know the words, we just can't get them out straight. Just as the English speakers have issues with the Dutch G, Dutch from several regions will have difficulties with certain sounds in English as they contradict to what they are used to do.
      Example in English would be Friesland. English speakers keep saying it with the fries of "frying" instead of the intended "freez" even though they know to produce te sound. However making ee from ie is so contradictive to their language that their brain just can't do it in casual conversation.

    • @Tweeteketje
      @Tweeteketje Před 2 lety

      @@mavadelo Hahaha, that must be so funny, they must be expecting some McDonalds and Burger Kings over there!

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před rokem +1

      Newsflash: people who learn a foreign language have an accent. You'd know that if you ever tried.

  • @pwkh763
    @pwkh763 Před 2 lety +1

    English is the first language of amsterdam

  • @kinnish5267
    @kinnish5267 Před 2 lety

    the Dutch are amazing at English that is very true

  • @clifffan3
    @clifffan3 Před 3 lety +2

    We speak better English than others speaks Dutch.

  • @redwannabil8031
    @redwannabil8031 Před rokem

    I love dutch English accent

  • @MrNuubstar
    @MrNuubstar Před 2 lety +1

    1:34 shits true.

  • @pjkr123
    @pjkr123 Před 2 lety +1

    Try speak english in rural netherlands, villages, and small towns, youll discover great things

    • @fabiofortuna182
      @fabiofortuna182 Před 2 lety

      i live in rural Netherlands and many don't even speak standard Dutch, let alone any other foreign language.

  • @Thundercatsie
    @Thundercatsie Před 2 lety

    I speak English very well.. nog niet zo snel, but that komt nog wel... :P

  • @arjenb8403
    @arjenb8403 Před 3 lety

    but this guy, is having an splaak geblek in dutch

  • @Elwood_McCable
    @Elwood_McCable Před 2 lety

    We've interviewed several people who speak English very poorly in an endeavor to pride pride ourselves.

    • @catherinebraza7259
      @catherinebraza7259 Před 2 lety

      To be fair, I'm an ESOL teacher by trade (and a native English speaker), and I didn't find that the interviewees spoke poorly at all. In fact, on the whole they spoke very well; they didn't make that many mistakes, and they spoke quite fluently.

  • @jamesonline9204
    @jamesonline9204 Před 2 lety

    Nederlanders spreek fantastiche Engels. And that's from a Brit who speaks Flemish and French!

  • @Adriana.Gabriela
    @Adriana.Gabriela Před rokem

    I think Dutch pronunciation of English is cute

  • @user-ie6jr4bg1w
    @user-ie6jr4bg1w Před 3 lety +4

    At english not in english. And dutch people do not speak english as welk as you may think

  • @joegeorge3889
    @joegeorge3889 Před 2 lety

    They speak good English

  • @mavadelo
    @mavadelo Před 2 lety

    I am an ace in English as long as I don't open my mouth. Writing and reading on "expert level" but when I talk you know... that dude is Dutch. I have a horrible fat accent.

  • @coffeeScryer
    @coffeeScryer Před 2 lety +1

    Some people from the Netherlands are so good at English and have accents that can be persuasively similar to accents that are found in North America.
    If you want to have a bit of fun, you can try tricking Americans or Canadians over the internet through voice chats.

  • @karenbailey9717
    @karenbailey9717 Před 2 lety

    That good? Yep! Try outstanding ! 😀

  • @chriskappert1365
    @chriskappert1365 Před rokem +1

    The best English speeking Dutch people live in the East Northeast of Holland.
    Their accent seems to merge perfectly with English .
    Most of our best singers are borne in that region .

  • @jazzguitar_22
    @jazzguitar_22 Před 2 lety

    The man in the street speaks English ok, but politicians do so in a horrible way.

  • @tomterhedde5781
    @tomterhedde5781 Před 2 lety

    Ik

  • @ibitorucookey-gam7503
    @ibitorucookey-gam7503 Před 2 lety

    Italian people sound like they're from New York or Boston

    • @fabiofortuna182
      @fabiofortuna182 Před 2 lety

      you watch too many movies. :) italian accent is horrible...

  • @robertheinrichvonseyfenste267

    just ask the Americans, which language they also speak.... probably Spanish, and that's it....

  • @TTTzzzz
    @TTTzzzz Před 3 lety +3

    Pronunciation is a problem. Grammatics is ok to good. Vocabulary is ok to good.

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před rokem

      Nah, from what I gather from the comments here people like our accent.

    • @TTTzzzz
      @TTTzzzz Před rokem

      @@13tuyuti They seem to like problematic
      pronunciation!

    • @13tuyuti
      @13tuyuti Před rokem

      @@TTTzzzz or they realize that 99% of all people who learn a foreign language has an accent.

  • @robertheinrichvonseyfenste267

    ever heard of stonecoal english? You speak it.....

  • @devnull1013
    @devnull1013 Před 2 lety +1

    Like die gast met die like ring in z'n oor is echt like een valley girl, like..

  • @tunes8160
    @tunes8160 Před rokem

    bad bunny 1:05

  • @BolleZijde
    @BolleZijde Před 3 lety +7

    Niet zo verwonderlijk, Engels is een afgeleide van Nederlands, maar de Engelsen horen dat natuurlijk
    niet zo graag.

    • @BluuurghAg9
      @BluuurghAg9 Před 3 lety +7

      Het is geen afgeleidde van het Nederlands. Het is een zustertaal. Engels is net als het Nederlands een Germaanse taal met veel Deense en Saksische invloeden. Het schijnt dat Fries nog dichterbij het Engels staat dan Nederlands.

    • @gartnl
      @gartnl Před 3 lety +1

      @@BluuurghAg9 In Friesland spelen ze dan ook Soccer ;) Maar het lijkt inderdaad soms wel alsof de grote volksverhuizing is vergeten.

    • @frisianmouve
      @frisianmouve Před 3 lety

      @@BluuurghAg9 Bûter, brea en griene tsiis is goed ingelsk en goed Frysk. Grien/tsiis en green/cheese hebben dezelfde uitspraak, bûter/butter wel iets anders

  • @milesfs.
    @milesfs. Před 2 lety

    I couldn’t disagree more

  • @lucyfrye5365
    @lucyfrye5365 Před 2 lety

    Fun fact. The most widely used Dutch word on the planet is : boss. (baas). It could have been any word, like fork or lemon but it just had to be the guy in charge. Now deal with it.

  • @jacobmaldonado6406
    @jacobmaldonado6406 Před 2 lety

    DUTCH ARE GREAT ENGLISH SPEAKERS WITH GREAT ACCENT ALMOST WITH AMERICAN ACCENT

  • @kironmanuel664
    @kironmanuel664 Před 2 lety

    The Dutch people are good in English.Some character needs to change.

  • @ProdSBee
    @ProdSBee Před 2 lety

    yalklka arb ade at inglejhs

  • @peachesballsack4508
    @peachesballsack4508 Před 2 lety

    no

  • @Psychonaut-im3zz
    @Psychonaut-im3zz Před 9 měsíci

    Good 'at' English.... The answer: no.

  • @meesm9497
    @meesm9497 Před 3 lety +2

    dutch people speaking english sounds terrible