"Dr." in Dutch stands for "Doctor" in English.
In Dutch or "in het Nederlands" you would say - "Mijn vrouw is ziek kan u me een Arts roepen".... means my wife is sick can you call me a Doctor
'Doktor' means doctor in all Germanic languages. To be more precise this statement is true for Swedish, Norwegian, Dutch, Danish and of course German.
He was dutch in ancestry. At the time he went to college to become a doctor, no black african person could have been admitted to any college in South Africa.
They have jobs, like being a doctor or someone that works for the government or they are a teacher etc. There are so many different professions!
Cor Docter has written: 'Grossiers in moord & doodslag' -- subject(s): Belgian Detective and mystery stories, Belgian prose literature, Detective and mystery stories, Belgian, Detective and mystery stories, Dutch, Dutch Detective and mystery stories, Dutch prose literature, History and criticism
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
'from English to Dutch' is 'van Engels naar Nederlands' in dutch
Dutch people or in the language that they speak over there (Dutch) Nederlanders
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.
The Dutch saw them as trading partners. The Dutch were not interested in converting them.
A dutch man is a man from the Netherlands, or as we dutch say a dutch man is a "hollander"