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Stonden

Stonden is the past tense plural form of the Dutch verb staan, meaning to stand or to be in an upright position. It is used for subjects in the third person plural or for the second-person plural in the simple past tense, for example: Wij stonden in de rij, Jullie stonden naast elkaar.

In contrast, the singular past tense form is stond, used with singular subjects: Ik stond, Jij stond,

Stonden also interacts with Dutch perfect tenses. The perfect (present perfect) of staan uses the past participle

Etymology traces staan to Old Dutch and the broader West Germanic verb family connected to the English

See also: staan, staan in dialects, and the related past forms zoals stond and stonden. In usage,

Hij
stond.
The
past
tense
of
staan
thus
has
two
distinct
forms
depending
on
number:
stond
for
singular
and
stonden
for
plural.
The
past
tense
describes
a
completed
or
ongoing
state
in
the
past,
such
as
a
position,
location,
or
posture
at
a
given
time.
gestaan
with
the
auxiliary
hebben:
ik
heb
gestaan,
wij
hebben
gestaan.
This
distinguishes
the
simple
past
vormstonden
from
the
compound
tense
used
to
express
experiences
or
lasting
states
extending
to
the
present.
stand.
The
forms
zijn
cognate
with
the
English
stand
and
related
Germanic
verbs,
reflecting
a
shared
root
for
the
concept
of
vertical
position
or
presence.
stonen
commonly
appears
in
narrative
descriptions
of
where
people
or
objects
were
located,
or
how
they
stood
at
a
particular
moment
in
the
past.