A1 Expression Neutral

Ik ben morgen vrij.

I am off tomorrow.

Significado

Stating you have no work.

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Contexto cultural

The 'Vrijdagmiddagborrel' (Vrijmibo) is a sacred tradition where colleagues drink together before their 'vrije' weekend starts. Part-time work is extremely common. Many people have a fixed 'vrije dag' (like Wednesday for parents), so this phrase is used weekly. Dutch people use 'agendas' (planners) for everything. Saying 'Ik ben vrij' is the only way to get a meeting scheduled. On days like King's Day or Liberation Day, almost everyone says 'Ik ben vrij,' and the whole country celebrates together.

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The 'Lekker' Trick

Add 'lekker' before 'vrij' to sound like a native and express how happy you are about your day off.

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Gratis vs Vrij

Never tell a shopkeeper you are 'gratis' unless you want to be taken home for free!

Significado

Stating you have no work.

💡

The 'Lekker' Trick

Add 'lekker' before 'vrij' to sound like a native and express how happy you are about your day off.

⚠️

Gratis vs Vrij

Never tell a shopkeeper you are 'gratis' unless you want to be taken home for free!

🎯

Inversion Mastery

Practice saying 'Morgen ben ik vrij' to get used to Dutch word order early on.

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Agenda Culture

If you are 'vrij,' don't be surprised if your Dutch friends ask you to plan something 3 weeks in advance.

Ponte a prueba

Fill in the missing word to say you are off tomorrow.

Ik ___ morgen vrij.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: ben

The verb 'ben' (am) is needed to complete the sentence.

Which sentence is grammatically correct when starting with 'Morgen'?

Choose the correct word order:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Morgen ben ik vrij.

In Dutch, the verb must be the second element in the sentence (inversion).

Match the Dutch phrase with its English meaning.

Match the following:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: all

These are essential distinctions for A1-A2 learners.

Complete the dialogue.

Collega: 'Kun je morgen werken?' Jij: 'Nee, sorry, ___.'

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: ik ben morgen vrij

'Ik ben morgen vrij' is the standard way to say you aren't working.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Ayudas visuales

Vrij vs. Gratis

Vrij (Freedom/Time)
Ik ben vrij I am off work
Vrije meningsuiting Free speech
Gratis (Money/Price)
Gratis koffie Free coffee
Kosteloos Without cost

Banco de ejercicios

4 ejercicios
Fill in the missing word to say you are off tomorrow. Fill Blank A1

Ik ___ morgen vrij.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: ben

The verb 'ben' (am) is needed to complete the sentence.

Which sentence is grammatically correct when starting with 'Morgen'? Choose A2

Choose the correct word order:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Morgen ben ik vrij.

In Dutch, the verb must be the second element in the sentence (inversion).

Match the Dutch phrase with its English meaning. Match A1

Empareja cada elemento de la izquierda con su par de la derecha:

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: all

These are essential distinctions for A1-A2 learners.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A1

Collega: 'Kun je morgen werken?' Jij: 'Nee, sorry, ___.'

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: ik ben morgen vrij

'Ik ben morgen vrij' is the standard way to say you aren't working.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Preguntas frecuentes

12 preguntas

Yes, both 'Ik ben vrij' and 'Ik heb vrij' are perfectly natural and interchangeable.

A single person is a 'vrijgezel.' If you say 'Ik ben vrij,' people usually assume you mean your schedule, not your relationship status.

You say 'Ik ben dit weekend vrij.'

The opposite is 'moeten werken' (having to work) or 'bezet zijn' (being busy).

Yes! 'Is deze plek vrij?' is the standard way to ask if a seat is taken.

Yes, it is neutral and polite. For extra formality, you can say 'Ik heb morgen een vrije dag.'

'Lekker' adds a sense of enjoyment. It's like saying 'I'm wonderfully off tomorrow.'

They share the same root! Friday is the day of the goddess Freya, and it's also the day most people look forward to being 'vrij.'

Yes, but it's slightly redundant. Just 'Ik ben vrij' already implies you're off work.

Say 'Ik ben de komende twee dagen vrij.'

Yes, though Flemish speakers might also say 'Ik ben in verlof.'

You are still 'vrij' from work, but you might say 'Ik ben vrij, maar ik heb het druk' (I'm off, but I'm busy).

Frases relacionadas

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vrijmibo

specialized form

Friday afternoon drinks

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vrije tijd

builds on

Free time / leisure time

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vakantie hebben

similar

To be on vacation

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uitslapen

similar

To sleep in

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vrijgezel

related

Single / Bachelor

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