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Beter

Beter is the Dutch word meaning “better.” It functions as the comparative form of the adjective goed and is also used as an adverb to indicate improvement or a higher degree. In everyday use, beter is employed to compare two or more items, states, or qualities, and it can describe both nouns and situations.

Grammar and usage. As a comparative adjective, better is used in both attributive and predicative positions.

Etymology and related forms. Beter is etymologically related to the English word better; both derive from the

See also. Goed, Beste. Dutch grammar of adjectives and comparatives. For broader context, the word’s usage spans

For
indefinite
nouns,
you
can
say
“een
betere
…”
(a
better
…).
With
a
definite
article
or
a
preceding
phrase,
the
ending
-e
is
used:
“de
betere
oplossing”
or
“het
gaat
beter.”
In
sentences,
the
common
pattern
is
comparing
two
elements:
“Dit
boek
is
beter
dan
het
andere.”
As
an
adverb,
it
often
appears
in
predicates
like
“Het
gaat
beter”
(It
is
going
better)
or
“We
voelen
ons
beter
na
rust.”
same
Germanic
roots
as
the
comparative
form
of
goed.
The
superlative
of
goed
in
Dutch
is
het
beste
(“the
best”).
Related
Dutch
forms
include
betere
(the
better)
as
the
attributive
form
used
with
definite
nouns.
statements
about
quality,
condition,
and
improvement
in
everyday
Dutch.