Niederlande
'sterben' is not a Dutch word, it is a German word and means 'to die'. Dutch (the language from the Netherlands) is often confused with 'Deutsch' (the German word for 'German')
No, Dutch is the language they speak in the Netherlands (Holland)'I am Dutch.' means you are from the Netherlands (Holland)
Netherlands = Niederlande
NO. !!!! The Dutch are from the Kingdom of the Netherlands. It is thought that the word 'Dutch' is a corruption of the word 'Deutsch' /. Deutschland is the German name for Germany.
The German name for Netherlands is " Die Niederlande" Sometimes the Netherlands are also called "Holland", which is incorrect, since Holland is only a small part of the Netherlands.
German declaration of war against the Netherlands happened in 1940.
No, Germans are German, speak German, and come from Germany. Dutch people come from the Netherlands. If you are referring to the Dutch language, it is spoken in the Netherlands, and also in a part of Belgium (Flanders, to be exact, and while it is more or less the same language, it has some differences, and is also called Flemish). What usually makes the confusion between German and Dutch is that the word "German" in German language is "Deutsch" (pronounced "Doitsh"), this word (Deutsch) got corrupted in English becoming "Dutch" and eventually started to mean "something or someone form the Netherlands". In resume, the word Dutch first was a cognate to German Deutsch, which means German, but nowadays means Hollander (Netherlander). Although the dutch and the german are both part of the same tribe namely the Germanic people, their blood and language really are related.
niederlanden
Answer 1:There isn't any difference, "German" being the translation of "deutsch". Perhaps you mean Dutch, which is another language. It is related, but there are many differences.Answer 2:In case you actually mean Dutch, it's the language spoken in the Netherlands (Holland) and it's a close language to German and English (kind of in the middle of the two). It's said that the word "Dutch" comes from a corruption of the word "Deutsch", which means german, nowadays Dutch means something from the Netherlands (including the language).
Finland is an English word. The Finnish word is Suomi. Nederland is the Dutch word for their country, called The Netherlands in English............................................................................Is it purely English? My dictionary tells me land is related to Dutch, German, Old Norse, Gothic word - land
Of course you can.
The word "Nassau" originated from the name of the German town of Nassau. It was also used as the name of the ruling house in Nassau, which later became the royal house of the Netherlands.