Steemfest Preparation: 5 Helpful Tips for Exploring Amsterdam + 10 New, Helpful Words and Expressions

in #vocabulary8 years ago (edited)

The Dutch are friendly people and most of them speak English very well.
They have some cultural peculiarities and it's helpful to get to know some of them in advance.


Please note, that I'm not dutch myself and that I have collected these tips over the years.
The information below might be incorrect and is solely based on my personal experience


#1 rent a bike

The Netherlands are a very flat area and the prefered mode of transportation is the bicycle.
A bicycle is called fiets and you can rent one at the local fietsverhuur.
Make sure you get one with a decent luggage rack, so you can carry a passenger.

#2 don't block the fietspad

Many tourists don't understand the concept of the fietspad - the bicycle lane.
If you just stepped out of the coffeeshop and you are wondering, why there is nobody else walking down the center of the pedestrian area - It's because you are in the bicycle lane.
Oppassen ! (Attention)
That's a major mistake - Don't be that tourist !

#3 don't pee into the gracht

Because it's such a flat country and a good part of it is below sealevel, the Dutch have to constantly drain their land.
Thats why there is an impressive net of canals, called grachten and so many windmills.
There are grachten all through Amsterdam and I know it can be tempting.
That's not the sewer system and instead you can pee in open stalls right in the street.
Just follow the smell.

#4 don't stare

When you walk through Amsterdam, or the Netherlands in general, you will notice that most houses don't have curtains.
You might go window-shopping and while 10 windows had been displays for a business, the next window could be to somebodies home and he's just having breakfast or is cutting his toenails.
Just act like it's normal.

#5 try frikandel

If you want to dive right into a different culture, it's a good way to start with food.
You can try your newly learned vocabulary in a local snackbar.
The dutch like their fastfood deep fried.
Frikandel is a very unusual way to prepare a meatball and very unique in it's style;
It goes well with frieten.


Todays vocabulary list:

DutchEnglish
Goede morgen !Good morning !
Oppassen !Watch out !
fietsbicycle
bromfietsmotorized bycicle
voet, voetenfoot, feet
te huurto rent
frieten kopento buy fries
frikandelodd hamburger patty
kan niet verstaanI don't understand
Tot ziens !See you !

This is a follow-up on this post ( just in case you have missed it ):
https://steemit.com/tag/@felixxx/steemfest-preparation-10-helpful-words-and-expressions-in-dutch

If you find any mistakes, please let me know below.

I hope I could inspire you to start learning some Dutch and do a little research before your trip to Amsterdam - It's fun !

Have a great day !

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Great tips! Allow me to add two warnings.

Anarchists: the Netherlands are a monarchy. Do not make jokes about the king! Lèse majesté is a crime there. Monarchists love their king. Having in front of you a young dreadlocked neo-hippie with anarchy patches stitched all over his self-crocheted pullover and bogarting a blunt is no guarantee you are not talking to a monarchist. If in doubt, everyone in the Netherlands is a monarchist. Praise the king!

Do not drink alcohol in public! Unless that beer is worth 40€ to you. The same goes for pot.

I think for those not knowing how to ride a bike, he/she has to learn first.
Unless you are teaching them. :-)

If you can not ride a bike, maybe you should try to rent a boat instead.
... that could be worth a seperate post :)

Steemfest sounds fun :) I hope someone live streams it.

I wish I could afford to go, maybe some day in the future when I'm more successful.

One cool thing nowadays is Google translate on phones. You can speak Dutch to it and it'd tell you what they said in English. and vice verses. When I was flipping channels one day, I heard of a paramedic using his phone in the back of an ambulance to help with the language barrier. Got to love modern technology.

I guess whenever in the future I do happen to travel to Europe, I'd need to switch to a carrier that's not prepaid and lets you roam internationally. I've also heard of people traveling to Europe buying a separate sim card locally if they have a unlocked phone. So maybe that'd be a cheaper option than paying an American carrier to roam internationally.

Using technology to bypass language barriers is great;
Learning new words will also affect the way you think.
That's why I recommend learning some words before the trip.

And yes, buying a seperate SIM and even a seperate cheap phone is the better option.

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