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Dutch Culture

Funny Dutch Words & Untranslatable Gems

Dutch has words English can only dream of — and some hilariously literal compounds. Here's a collection of untranslatable gems that reveal how the Dutch see the world.

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10+untranslatables
literal& delightful
culturein words
funto learn

Words that don't translate

Some Dutch words capture feelings English has no single word for — and some literal compounds are pure joy.

Untranslatable feelings

No English equivalent.

Dutch What it means
gezellig cosy-convivial warmth; the most Dutch word
uitwaaien to walk in the wind to clear your head
voorpret the joy of anticipation before an event
gunnen to be genuinely glad someone gets something good
uitbuiken relaxing after a big meal to let your stomach settle
natafelen lingering at the table chatting after dinner

Hilariously literal compounds

The Dutch just stick words together.

Dutch Literally Means
handschoen hand-shoe glove
wasbeer wash-bear raccoon
spiegelei mirror-egg fried egg
stofzuiger dust-sucker vacuum cleaner
slagroom hit-cream whipped cream

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Frequently asked questions

What is the most untranslatable Dutch word?

'Gezellig' — a feeling of cosy conviviality and warm togetherness that no single English word captures. 'Uitwaaien' (walking in the wind to clear your head) is another favourite.

What are some funny literal Dutch words?

handschoen (hand-shoe = glove), wasbeer (wash-bear = raccoon), spiegelei (mirror-egg = fried egg), stofzuiger (dust-sucker = vacuum) and slagroom (hit-cream = whipped cream).

Why does Dutch combine words like that?

Like German, Dutch builds compound words by joining smaller ones. The results are logical once you break them apart — and often delightfully literal.

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