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maakte

Maakte is the simple past tense (preterite) form of the Dutch verb maken, meaning to make or to do. It denotes a completed action in the past and is used with a singular subject. For plural subjects, the past tense is maakten, as in wij maakten, jullie maakten, zij maakten. The formal you (u) also uses maakte, as in u maakte. The form geldt for all third-person singular and second-person singular subjects in the past.

Conjugation and forms: ik maakte; jij maakte; hij/zij/het maakte; wij maakten; jullie maakten; zij maakten; u maakte.

Usage and context: maakte appears in narrative or descriptive past constructions. It is appropriate for describing

Etymology and morphology: maken is a Dutch verb from the West Germanic language family. Maakte is the

See also: maken, gemaakt.

The
corresponding
past
participle
is
gemaakt,
and
it
is
used
with
have
to
form
the
present
perfect:
ik
heb
gemaakt
(I
have
made).
a
completed
action
at
a
specific
time
or
during
a
defined
period
in
the
past,
often
accompanied
by
time
expressions
such
as
gisteren
(yesterday),
toen
(then),
vorige
week
(last
week).
It
is
distinct
from
the
present
tense
maken,
which
expresses
current
or
general
actions
(ik
maak).
weak-verb
preterite
formed
by
adding
a
past-tense
suffix
to
the
stem
maak-;
the
stem
remains
unchanged
aside
from
this
suffix,
with
spelling
aligning
to
Dutch
phonology.
The
past
participle
is
gemaakt,
used
with
hebben
to
form
the
present
perfect.