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Teruggeeft

Teruggeeft is not a standalone verb in standard Dutch; it is commonly understood as the present-tense form of the separable verb teruggeven, meaning to give back or return something. In normal sentences the verb is written as two words: hij geeft terug, zij geeft terug, met het object in between or after. The single string “teruggeeft” is not the standard orthography, though confusion can occur in headlines or informal writing.

Etymology and meaning: The word comes from terug (back, again) and geven (to give). Together they express

Usage and nuance: Teruggeven is used when an item is handed back to someone who should receive

Conjugation and forms: The verb is separable; in present tense you say ik geef terug, jij geeft

Related concepts: Terugbrengen denotes returning to a place; teruggeven focuses on returning to the owner or

the
action
of
returning
an
item
to
its
owner,
rightful
place,
or
previous
state.
The
nuance
is
typically
about
restoration
to
the
rightful
owner
or
to
a
place
of
origin,
rather
than
merely
placing
something
somewhere
again.
it—such
as
returning
a
borrowed
object
to
its
owner,
or
submitting
something
to
an
authority
after
review
(for
example,
a
graded
assignment
to
a
student,
or
a
document
to
an
office).
It
contrasts
with
terugbrengen,
which
more
often
specifies
returning
something
to
a
location
(for
instance,
returning
a
book
to
the
library).
terug,
hij
geeft
terug.
The
past
tense
is
gaf
terug,
and
the
past
participle
is
teruggegeven,
used
with
haben
in
perfect
tenses
(heeft
teruggegeven).
Future
forms
use
zullen
teruggeven.
rightful
recipient,
and
can
be
used
metaphorically
to
describe
returning
information
or
status
as
well.