After the g, the rounded Dutch vowels are the hardest part of pronunciation. Here's how to make ui, eu, uu and ij — the sounds English simply doesn't have.
These sounds require lip and tongue positions English never uses. Here's the trick for each.
How to make each.
Round your lips for 'oo', then glide toward 'uh' keeping lips rounded.
Say English 'ee', then round your lips without moving your tongue.
Like 'uu' but slightly more open — tongue forward, lips rounded.
An 'ay'-like diphthong; mouth fairly closed.
Drill these out loud.
| Sound | Words |
|---|---|
| ui | huis, ui, tuin, uit, muis |
| uu | uur, huur, muur, buur, duur |
| eu | deur, neus, keuken, kleur |
| ij/ei | mij, wij, ijs, blij, klein, trein |
The fastest trick: say the English ‘ee’ sound (as in ‘see’), then round your lips without moving your tongue. That’s uu. Open slightly more for eu. These front rounded vowels feel strange because English never combines a forward tongue with rounded lips — but once your mouth learns it, it sticks.
Dutch Daily's Pronunciation Lab gives phoneme-level feedback on ui, eu and uu — exactly the sounds English speakers struggle with. Free to start.
Round your lips as if to say 'oo', then glide toward 'uh' while keeping your lips rounded. It's in words like 'huis' and 'uit' and has no English equivalent.
Say the English 'ee' sound, then round your lips without moving your tongue. It's a front rounded vowel, as in 'uur' and 'huur'.
Both are front rounded vowels (tongue forward, lips rounded). 'eu' (deur, neus) is slightly more open than 'uu' (uur, huur).