Dutch tongue twisters are called tongbrekers, meaning tongue breakers. Dutch has several sounds that make it uniquely suited to tongue twisters. The guttural r (made in the throat), the sch cluster (a hissing throat sound), and the g sound (a voiced version of the Dutch ch) are all absent in English. Dutch also has a rich tradition of wordplay exploiting noun-verb ambiguity, where the same word means both the thing and the action — a linguistic gift to tongue twister writers.
Popular Dutch Tongue Twisters
- De kat krabt de krullen van de trap — the cat scratches the curls off the stairs
- Als vliegen achter vliegen vliegen — when flies fly after flies
- De schildpad schilt de schil — the turtle peels the skin
- Roodborstje zat op het randje — the robin on the reed
- De bonte hond beet de blonde bond — the spotted dog bit the blonde bond
Why Are Dutch Tongue Twisters Hard?
Dutch phonology challenges speakers at every level. The guttural r requires precise throat control that deteriorates immediately at speed. The sch cluster combines a sibilant s with a guttural ch in one breath, and the Dutch g adds yet another layer. Dutch also freely borrows from both Germanic and French phonological traditions, creating a unique soundscape that rewards careful articulation.
Individual Dutch Tongue Twisters
- De Kat Krabt de Krullen van de Trap — the cat and the curls
- Als Vliegen Achter Vliegen Vliegen — the flying flies
- De Schildpad Schilt de Schil — the sch-heavy turtle twister
- Roodborstje Zat op het Randje — the robin with the straw
- De Bonte Hond — the spotted dog
Explore more on alltonguetwisters.com — your home for tongue twisters for kids, hard tongue twisters, and funny tongue twisters.