29 OCTOBER 1948, Page 17

WHAT IS DUTCH LIKE?

Sra.,—In Mr. C. R. Hewitt's otherwise admirable article there is surely one statement open to criticism. To say that Dutch resembles no other language is a misuse of words. It is closely allied to Low German and Lowland Scots, and might well be called a cross between the two. Once, while skating on a canal in Holland as a young man who in those days had no Dutch, I was accosted by a man with the words: "Hoe laat is het nu, Mynheer ? "—obviously, "How late is it now ? " I showed him my watch ; he thanked me and skated away. It is true that the spoken language has sounds that, as far as I know, are not to be met with in others ; notably such words as "us" and "huis" are very hard to pronounce correctly, while the initial "g" is a stumbling-block to many.—Yours faithfully, M. D. HILL. Uplands Cottage, nr. Ledbury, Herefordshire.