Bear is spelled the same way in dutch. It is same in English as it is in Dutch.
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Heineken is not a English word. It is a Dutch beer that is very popular. The beer was named after the original owner of the brewing company. There fore, Heineken was originally a dutch sir name. There is no translation to Arabic.
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The proper noun (a Dutch brewery and beer name) is spelled Heineken.
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Answer: I believe it is Pilsner Urquill.
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No, it is a Dutch beer (from The Netherlands), named after founder Gerard Adriaan Heineken.
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Its the last name of the original owner Gerard Adriaan Heineken.
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Shenkie is the name of a CD from the Dutch band 'De jeugd van tegenwoordig' (The youth of today). Shenkie is a new word that was formed by this band and most probably it means 'beer'. The word beer used in sentences like: "you want a beer?".
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Not too much. Those bottles are still available in any supermarket. They are even filled with beer!
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because they like to do something what they can do really good
Darts, like fishing and softball, is a beer-friendly sport.
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Morris Abel Beer is a Dutch author known for writing books on political and economic topics. Some of his notable works include "The Politics of Wealth Inequalities" and "Power Dynamics in Global Economics."
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There is no such language as "African". Hundreds of languages are spoken in Africa.
If you meant "Afrikaans" which is a derivative of Dutch that is spoken in South Africa, the word is "Beer".
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teddybeer, plural teddyberen You should pronounce the ee in beer as the a in table. The first e in beren also like the a in table and the second e as the u in but.
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The collective nouns for beer are a keg of beer or a case of beer.
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As I'm not exactly a commercial-minded person, I'll answer the first part only, to the best of my ability: some great writers used to drink gallons of beer, but drinking gallons of beer won't transmogrify you into the new Proust or Hemingway, you may rest assured! I happen to be translating the former's A la recherche from French into Dutch, sipping only tea and munching madeleines, haha!
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A beer can is a lightweight metallic can which is intended to contain beer.
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to be spoken in the dutch language
To be in trouble, as in, "We'll be in Dutch with Mom if we eat those cookies!"
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You only need to be in possession of a dutch passport be dutch, or "nederlands"
you are considered a Dutchman "nederlander" if you are also born in the Netherlands.
this is one giant lie. a pasport that says dutch means nothing, a guy for example a muslim with a dutch pasport is not dutch. you have to be dutch by blood to be a dutchman.
if your dutch by blood you dont have to speak dutch to be dutch
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'from English to Dutch' is
'van Engels naar Nederlands' in dutch
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testicles, breasts, grapes, beats, homosexuals, beets, coke, pepsi, beer, beer, beer, beer, beer, beer, beer, sex
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Dutch people or in the language that they speak over there (Dutch) Nederlanders
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The sequel to the the pub with no beer is:" the answer to the pub with no beer"
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Beer batter is about the simplest beer recipe there is. See link for recipe.
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In Holland, the Dutch adjective is "Holland's." There is no true adjective for Holland in English. The closest adjective in English is "Dutch," however, that not only applies to Holland but to all of the Netherlands. It is also common to hear "of or from Holland" in English.
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A dutch man is a man from the Netherlands, or as we dutch say a dutch man is a "hollander"
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Dutch is not a gender, it is a nationality. The Dutch are the inhibitants of The Netherlands and Dutch is the language they speak.
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The Dutch saw them as trading partners.
The Dutch were not interested in converting them.
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Beer on premise refer the beer that is sold and consumed in a particular place while beer off premises refer to the beer that is consumed in a different location that it is sold.
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Beer was discovered by a tribe of Neanderthals hidden deep in a cave in France by the Beer God. That who discover the beer.
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There are many recipes that use beer as an ingredient, such as bratwurst boiled in beer and a beer-cheese soup.
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The Beer Store's motto is 'the ultimate source for beer'.
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Bier (dutch beer), alcoholic bitters are quite popular and every town has its own version, Jenever, the local spirit made with juniper berries and sometimes called Dutch gin, Brandewijn (a brandy-like spirit), is one of the oldest spirits and is still popular in some areas of the Netherlands, Advocaat is a thick drink, made with brandewijn, Other Dutch liqueurs include Curaçao, Triple Sec (similar to Cointreau), Parfait d'Amour, and Dutch-made versions of anisette, apricot brandy and crème de menthe.
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