For motion verbs like fietsen, lopen, rijden, zwemmen, vliegen, and varen, Dutch picks "zijn" when the sentence names a destination and "hebben" when it just describes the activity.
Collega: ?
Sara: , .
Vriendin: ?
Lisa: , .
Buurman: .
Tom: , , .
Mark: Ik ben met de auto naar Den Bosch gereden, anderhalf uur.
I drove to Den Bosch by car, an hour and a half.
Vul het ontbrekende woord in:
How was your driving lesson today?
“Ik heb nog geen OV-chipkaart.”
A paper ticket, please. I don't have an OV chip card yet.
“Dat is €11,20.”
That is €11.20. Do you travel often? Then a dalvoordeel subscription might be better value.
“De band is lek.”
Hello, I have a problem with my bike. The tyre is flat.
“Wat mag het zijn?”
Good afternoon. What can I get you?
“Dat is twee euro zestig.”
That is two euros sixty.