Tulips
Cheese, clogs, tulips, and windmills.
Tulips! Windmills! Clogs! Cheese!
cheese , milk and tulips
Yes, back in the day, when they were busy importing tulips, they also imported fine caffeinated beverages, back in 1692. Just kidding, and no.
whe have the (al)most famous cheese in the world, gouda cheese. and those flowers, called tulips, are dutch flowers. _______________________________________________________ To make money.
tulips are found in southern Europe and Asia, although they grow up in many place.
The word "Dutch" in Dutch is "Nederlands."
In Dutch you say "interieur" or "inwendig".
NO, it's the other way around.After the war, the Dutch government in recognition of the liberation of the Netherlands by the Canadian Army, decided that every year they would send a load of tulips to Canada. So, every year you can visit Ottawa,in the spring, and see a beautiful sea of tulips.
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.
Planting Tulips, carving wooden shoes, putting their fingers in Dikes...indulging in drugs and prostitution; both of which are legal .
Tulips were introduced to the Netherlands in the late 16th century, with the first recorded bulbs arriving around 1593. They became popular quickly, leading to the Tulip Mania in the 1630s, a period of intense speculation and soaring prices for tulip bulbs. This fascination with tulips significantly influenced Dutch culture and economics.