This is very much true. The only help is to learn the articles together with a noun. So there is no: "Schule", think always: "die Schule", "der Baum", "das Auto". I live 30 years in Germany and on the one side you really get a feeling of the articles and on the other side you learn to decide. So if I don't know the article I decide one on my intuition but then I keep to it without any hesitation. So if I would get it wrong and said: "das Schule" then I would do all the conjug. according to this
yes, I think he would. I live 26 out of Poland (I was 24 as I left) and I still understand everything, also the newest slang (only seldom I have to look up in the slang dictionary)
Thank you for saying the words/phrases slowly the first time as it is easier to repeat for us who are learning to speak German. I would love to see more videos like this.
Thank's for the german lesson videos,I watch them over and over, Thank's Magauchsein! Love the head turn by Rebea on the word Tussi,she got alot of expression like the title says.
Daniel Léo Simpson update to myself: you can slow down the speed by clicking "Settings" (the gear in the bottom right part of the video). You can click the video once with the mouse, then use space bar to stop/pause and L-arrow R-arrow keys to back up her sentance or skip forward. Sehr cool You Tube!
schön*!! Dont forget the dots! ;) English pronunciation: "ö" sounds like the "u" in "hurt" However "o" sounds like the english o.. ( "ä" = the "a" in "fantasy", "a" = the "u" in "dust" "ü" = "ou" in "you", "u" = "u" in "around" but a bit stronger ^^ ) Also the meaning of o & ö (a & ä, u & ü) is different. For example: Schon = already Schön = beautiful If you have no german keyboard you should use "oe" for "ö" ("ue" = "ü", "ae" = "ä" ).. :P
3:51 Wo liegt "Makkaresch"? Hahahah Vielleicht in" Makkoros"?? I am learning a lot, thanks to Easy German videos, but I noticed that some mistakes fall through the cracks. This project is awesome and its vídeos deserve careful checking before being released on RU-vid. Once the project has an educational purpose, it should care more about spelling!
Literally "You don't have all the cups in your cupboard," like all sorts of funny English sayings that mean the same thing, "You've lost your marbles," or "You're a few crayons short of the box" "You're a few cards short of a deck."
Hey! Thanks for this helpful video. By the way, I hear a lot of people keep on talking about Rocelangue Method (google it), but I'm not sure if it is good. Have you tried this how to speak practical foreign language tutorial known as Rocelangue Method? I have heard some amazing things about it.
We have some common noises with russian and russians use some german loan words, though english is much closer to german. Russian is a slavic language with a very different word order and grammar. Even the alphabet is different.
they really should tell people that different parts of germany use, sometimes, completely different words. i was in bamberg germany 6 years and never heard some of the stuff they're saying on here. is this translation from old east german territory?
Mostly normally, just like we do here, eg richtig pronounced just like the beginning of right, but somtimes it is rolled a bit, as in brot, which meand bread.
Wieso habt ihr das halbe Video abgeschnitten? :( Gibt es den Rest noch w zu sehen? Ich habe das Video vor enger Zeit gesehen und wollte meinen Fortschritt vergleichen.
I have always told people they were the same family language. As a native English speaker, I find German to be easy for me to learn. I also like German a lot more then English. There are to many stupid rules in English.
That is true. For me, I wanted to learn the language that my family once spoke about 270 years ago. Once, they came to America, there went the German langnage. lol
I agree. Some of the phrases are quite funny but if you are just beginning to learn the language, it could easily end up in someone misunderstanding you and you not being able to explain away that it was a joke. This reminds me of a phrasebook which my Japanese friend showed me which has phrases like "I'm fuckin hungry" (there were worse ones) - like the writer just inserted "fuckin" to be cool or something. People do speak like that but it's kind of missing the point of a phrasebook.
hi , i have a quick question, when you say " alles fit "· is that a question ??, because in the translation says everything's alright ?, // but in English the Question will be : Is everything alright ? so when you say " everything's alright " that it means that you are responding , so i got confused with that, can you please clearify that for me , danke
That is funny. Since, I am still learning it that part gets a little confusing. Also, what words get uppercase and what doesn't. And how there isn't really a "s" like cars, cats, bikes, ect.... Just another thing I will need to learn.
in grammatical book, i read that there are long and short "ü" and "ö". Do you guys, German, really recognize which one is long and which one is short when you speak? one more thing, to me, mädchen sounds like midchen, so how exactly do u pronounce this word?
hallo liebe leut,anybody know wo is the girl of the video......ooooohhh...she is very beautiful,what's the name she,please make more videos with she....thank you....danke