As a Dutch person most of what I know about Indonesian history isn't very jolly (due to us)
hyves
Not to be confused with "ontroerend goed", which moves you (emotionally)
There are no beaches in the Netherlands that far away from a major city though
Zeker veel beter dan PVV, maar de CDA is ook wel een partij vol schandalen. Ik zou zeggen, de reden dat NSC en BBB überhaupt bestaan
Are you still talking about the Netherlands? Unless it's on one of the islands, I don't see how a house near the beach could be in a bad location
"Meel" is ook een interessante voor dat rijtje (specifiek de L aan het eind van een lettergreep, "stelen" is wel weer normaler bijvoorbeeld). De gewone klanken lukken voor Nederlanders ook gewoon niet goed voor een R/L.
At best you could say there's "the" (pronounced thee) and "the" (pronounced "thuh"), like le vs l'
Germanic language Dutch only has "de" and "het"
plenty of kids up for adoption
Maybe this is very country-dependent, but at least in the Netherlands that's not the case at all (and adoptions from abroad get shady, like without the mother's consent)
In Dutch, "haai" (shark) sounds very similar to "hi" (the English word), same for "hooi" (hay) and "hoi" (hi). Which leads to this hilarious comic I saw once where a shark meets a bale of hay ^edit:^ ^somehow^ ^I^ ^typed^ ^bay^ ^of^ ^hale^
In Baarle-Nassau and Baarle-Hertog, which is essentially one village split between the Netherlands and Belgium in the messiest way possible, I think it's based on where the front door is
I think this uses /r/Netherlands (406k subscribers, English-only) instead of /r/theNetherlands (1.4k subscribers, Dutch+English)