Hoi! Is er iemand hier die het CNaVT kreegde?
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Hoi! Is er iemand hier die het CNaVT kreegde?
sorry...i don't no. but you can look in "Memberlist" at the top of the screen to see if he/she is on it. :)
i like your name, kostya. what does your name mean? (in het Engels, indien/als mogelijk).
Thank you very much :oops: Kostya is a shortened form of Konstantin (you know that town, Konstantinopol in Byzantium :) ) It means "constant" or following another translation "the son of Constant".Quote:
Originally Posted by Nova
Groetjes.
cool. i've heard it before, so it just sounded familiar. i see now. i like it. constant. :D
spasibo. any luck on finding cnavt kreegde? zhelayu vam udachi!
paka
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Enkele verbeteringen :D :arrow: "pOka"; "VAM" has mostly very official use, in bussines situation, or is used for the people much older than you. I'm a student of 21, so it'd be better to say "желаю ТЕБЕ удачи" ("zhelayu tebe udachi"), in case if you're not for instance my director... :) (thank you, by the way :D ) But actually the last was not a mistake.Quote:
Originally Posted by Nova
And no, people don't write whether they have "certificaat nederlands als vreemde taal" or not. It's really interesting how this exam is done. I wanted to do it soon...
Groetjes!
thank you for "Enkele verbeteringen"
i know "poka" it's just easier to type it as it sounds when not using cyrillic :bouncing: ah, the love of laziness!
what do you mean? the strange language certificate of dutch language? lol i'm confused :D
a, tak...zhelayu tebe udachi!!! more verbeteringen? :wink:
poka
vaarwel...
good languages...like babyl
Not as strange as useful. Er is ook 2NT ("'t certifikaat nederlands als tweede taal") :)Quote:
Originally Posted by Nova
Hi Kostya!
no sorry, can't say I have (native speaker :wink: ), but since you plan on doing the exam soon, just wanted to help.
Is er iemand hier die het CNaVT kreegde?
should be:
Is er hier iemand die het CNaVT gekregen heeft?
or much better:
Is er hier iemand die het CNaVT heeft behaald?
Gekregen indicates getting something (an object) from someone, while 'behalen' specifically indicates having received a certificate for passing an exam.
Call me a miereneuker (literal meaning: ant fu**ker - slang for someone who is overly precise), but I hope other people will correct my Russian mistakes as well (which for me as a starter, would probably mean a full time job for them :) ).