Die tegnikus help die kliënt en luister eers na die probleem.

Questions & Answers about Die tegnikus help die kliënt en luister eers na die probleem.

Why is die used so many times?

Die is the Afrikaans definite article, equivalent to the.

In this sentence, it appears before each definite noun:

  • die tegnikus = the technician
  • die kliënt = the client
  • die probleem = the problem

A useful thing to remember: Afrikaans does not have different forms like English the vs gendered articles in some other languages. Die works for all nouns in this kind of use.

Why are the verbs help and luister not changed for he helps and he listens?

Because Afrikaans verbs usually do not change form according to the subject in the present tense.

So:

  • ek help = I help
  • jy help = you help
  • hy help = he helps
  • ons help = we help

The same is true for luister.

That means Afrikaans is simpler than English here: you do not add -s for he/she/it.

Why is die tegnikus not repeated before luister?

Because the same subject is doing both actions.

So Afrikaans, like English, can say:

  • Die tegnikus help die kliënt en luister ...

This works the same way as English:

  • The technician helps the client and listens ...

You only need to repeat the subject if you want extra emphasis or if the structure requires it.

What does eers mean here?

Eers means first, at first, or first of all, depending on context.

In this sentence, it shows order:

  • the technician helps the client
  • and first listens to the problem before doing something else

So eers adds the idea that listening is the first step.

Why does Afrikaans say luister na die probleem? Why is na needed?

Because luister normally goes with the preposition na when you say what someone is listening to.

So:

  • luister na die probleem = listen to the problem
  • luister na musiek = listen to music

This is very similar to English listen to.
You generally cannot just say luister die probleem.

How does the word order work in this sentence?

Afrikaans main clauses normally put the finite verb in the second position.

Here the structure is:

  • Die tegnikus = subject
  • help = finite verb
  • die kliënt = object
  • en luister eers na die probleem = coordinated second action

So the sentence starts in a very normal Afrikaans pattern:

  • Subject + verb + rest

After en, the sentence continues with another verb phrase linked to the same subject.

Also, eers comes before na die probleem, which is a natural position for an adverb like first.

What does the spelling mark in kliënt do?

The two dots are called a trema.

In kliënt, they show that the vowels are pronounced in separate syllables, rather than blending together as one vowel sound.

So kliënt is pronounced more like:

  • kli-ent

rather than as one single smooth vowel group.

The trema helps you see the syllable break.

Why are tegnikus, kliënt, and probleem not capitalized?

Because Afrikaans does not capitalize ordinary nouns.

Unlike German, common nouns stay lowercase unless they begin the sentence.

So in Afrikaans:

  • die tegnikus
  • die kliënt
  • die probleem

Only proper names and the first word of a sentence are capitalized.

Is en just the normal word for and?

Yes. En simply means and.

It links the two actions done by the same subject:

  • help die kliënt
  • luister eers na die probleem

So the sentence is basically built as:

  • The technician helps the client and listens first to the problem

It is a very common and straightforward way to connect verbs in Afrikaans.

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