This lesson deals with shops, buying, selling, prices and money. There will be some attention for diminutives and for sentence structures in Dutch.
You're already familiar wit zegt u het maar - the most currently used
phrase not only in restaurants and pubs, but - even more - in shops. Telling
what you want to buy is just as easy as ordering: you say what you want and
let it be followed by alstublieft ('please') or you first say Mag
ik (means 'Can I have') plus the item you want.
The rest of the conversation in a shop mostly contains just standard phrases like Anders nog iets? ('anything else?'), Dat was het ('that's all') and Hoeveel is het? ('How much is it?').
Here's a standard kind of conversation:
Text 5.1 - Een kilo tomaten
Zegt u het maar
Mag ik een kilo tomaten?
Mag het ietsje meer zijn?
Ja, hoor.
Kijkt u eens
Anders nog iets?
Nee, dat was het.
Hoeveel is het?
€ 4,10
Alstublieft
Heeft u er een dubbeltje bij?
Nee, sorry. Ik heb helemaal geen kleingeld.
The phrase Mag het ietsje meer zijn? means 'May it be a little bit more?' (strange enough it's never asked if it can be a bit less). In fact iets already means 'a bit' (also: 'something' like in anders nog iets which means 'anything else') - the -je suffix makes it even smaller.
This -je suffix can also be -tje, -etje or -pje (often after an m) and is called 'diminutive', or in Dutch verkleining. It's used quite a lot in Dutch, either to make things smaller or to make thing look more innocent. A 'little book', for example, is een boekje, a 'small tabel' is een tafeltje and a little flower een bloempje. Another example: a business like appointment is een afspraak, but a date is een afspraakje - so here the -je is used to make it look "more innocent" (even if it's the big date you've been trying to get for years...).
Diminutives may also occur in certain situations or expressions where they do not seem to have a function. In a shop, a kilo might become een kilootje, but it's still the same 1000 gram; you might be addressed as meneertje or mevrouwtje while you might not be very small or innocent; a cup of coffee will mostly be een kopje koffie, no matter how big it is. In those cases the diminutives are just to be considered part of the expression or perhaps to express some kind of sympathy.
The word dubbeltje, as used above (Heeft u er een dubbeltje bij? - 'Do you have 10 cents with it?') even doesn't have a non-diminutive form.
This brings us to Dutch coins and notes. Here's an overview:
Text 5.2 - Geld
De cent - 1 cent (1)
De stuiver - 5 cent (2)
Het dubbeltje - 10 cent (3)
De euro - € 1,- (4)
Het vijfje - € 5,- (5)
Het tientje - € 10,- (6)
Het briefje van 20 - € 20,- (7)
Het briefje van 50 - € 50,- (8)
Het briefje van 100 - € 100,- (9)
Het briefje van 1000 - € 1000,- (10)
Additional remarks:
The euro sign is €.
Between euro's and cents, there's a comma, not a dot: dots are used for
thousands, comma's for the seperation of decimals.
The word briefje means literally 'note', so it can also refer to a memo.
In spoken Dutch, euro and cent are used only as singulars, unless one
speaks of coins. So € 100,15 is honderd euro en vijftien cent.
A Dutchman mostly leaves cent away, though: honderd euro vijftien.
The phrases you've learned by now, have two kinds of sentence structures:
subject - verb - rest
This is a basic sentence structure.
It's used in simple statements.
Example:
Ik
heb
helemaal geen kleingeld
subject
verb
rest
verb - subject - rest
This is an inverted sentence structure
It's used when: - the sentence is a direct question or request, - if something
comes before the subject, and it's not one word, seperated by a comma (like
oh, ah, ja, nee, meneer, mevrouw, etcetera).
Examples:
Mag
ik
een kilo tomaten?
verb
subject
rest
's Morgens
drink
ik
koffie
"something else"
verb
subject
rest
For English speakers this structure is not that hard as long as it's
a question: in English you do the same thing, although the verb you start
the quetion with is quite often 'to do'. In Dutch you don't: instead of
'do you want coffee', you simply ask 'Want you coffee'.
The inversion if something comes before the subject is much harder to
get used to. It's important though, to get it right when you're still
at the first level, because later on, it just gets harder.
Quite often, the thing that comes before the subject is a statement
of time (like 's morgens in the above sentence) or place.
Another thing in Dutch sentence structure that's hard to get used to: if
there's two verbs, the second one is usually placed at the end. You might
already have noticed this in Mag het ietsje meer zijn?: the first verb,
Mag ('May/Can'), is at the beginning (inverted structure) and the second
one, zijn ('be'), is at the end.
Here's two more examples:
Wilt
u
misschien
iets
drinken?
Want
you
perhaps
something
to drink?
verb #1
subject
rest ...
...
verb #2
Ik
wil
een kilo
appels
kopen
I
want
a kilo
apples
to buy
subject
verb #1
rest ...
...
verb #2
The above mentioned kilo is well known as being 1000 grams. Because some other
words concerning weights might cause some confusion, here's is listing:
Text 5.3 - Gewicht
een kilo
= 1000 gram
= 2 pond
een pond
= 500 gram
= 5 ons
een ons
= 100 gram
= 1/10 kilo
anderhalf pond
= 750 gram
3/4 kilo
Vocabulary
anderhalf
one and a half
anders
else; different
de appel
the apple
bij
with, at
de brief
the letter
het briefje
the note
de cent
the cent
het dubbeltje
ten cents coin
er
there; it
de/het gram
the gram
de euro
the euro
helemaal
totaly
hoeveel
how much
de/het kilo
the kilo
het kleingeld
the change
kopen
to buy
meer
more
nog
still; yet
de/het ons
100 gram
de/het pond
500 gram
de stuiver
5 cents coin
het tientje
10 euro note
van
of; from
het vijfje
5 euro note
More ...
Before you move on to the next chapter you should just take a look at (don't do the exercises yet, save them untill you're at level 2):
Theory: constructing sentences
Theory: verb couples
You could also take a look at these pages - but at this level it would be to much to remember al the listed words and phrases, so just browse and pick what you think you might need:
Extra: Shopping - Boodschappen doen
Extra: List of shops
With the help of the above mentioned lists and the phrases you learned in this lesson, you could make yourself a list of things you would like to buy and imagine the conversation that would take place in the shops (of course, you shouldn't go to the supermarket ...).