Thank you very much Frau Laura. For me you are the best Teacher. I've been watching your videos for a month now and i can tell that I learned a lot and improved my German language ❤️ Lots of love.
It might help to show dative as “to her,” “to him”, etc. so the difference with accusative “her”, “him,” etc. is more clear. Technically it’s not exactly the same, but it can help beginners to understand the different purpose of the cases.
Hey Laura, danke für solche faszinierenden Video, nur will ich sagen, würdest du nicht darüber sprechen, dass der Akk. vor Dat. kommt wenn beide nomen Pronomen sind.
These things used to scare the hell out of me along with the cases, but you, being the exorcist teacher 👩🏫, managed to cleanse my soul and reinvigorate my love 😍 for german 😂 😂… thanks a lot 😍😍😍😍😍🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
I think you can adjust the speed at which you listen to the videos? But, yes, I will try to tame my enthusiasm and slow down a bit in future videos. :-) Thanks for the feedback.
Hi there! While it does say "Account & Billing info" you only need to provide your name and email to sign up for the free course. I hope you check it out! - Nicole, GwL Team
First I'm not fluent English I have Intrust to Learn other languages but I'm not fluent in English conversation so my total presently emphasis on English
I don't know that there is a hard and fast answer for this one other than to say that language shifts continually. Just for fun, here's an article on 20 words that have changed their meaning. :-) ideas.ted.com/20-words-that-once-meant-something-very-different/
Yes, "Nachbarn" is a plural German word. It is the plural form of "Nachbar," which means "neighbor." However, there is one element that can be confusing. ‘Weak’ masculine nouns will be declined in all cases except the nominative. So you will see it like this: der Nachbar den Nachbarn dem Nachbarn des Nachbarns (genitive sometimes adds an -s) Determining if it is the singular Nachbarn or plural Nachbarn will all come down to what declensions are being used with it. You can read more about that here: germanwithlaura.com/declension/#special-situations -Nicole, GwL Team
COULD YOU PLZ EXPLAIN ...IF WE FOLLOW THE ALL IN ONE DECLENSION CHART....THEN ACCORDINGLY ...WHICH ONE IS CORRECT?: "das ist meins stuhl" or "das ist mein stuhl"