How else klicks the like button even before going through the lesson? If you do,hit the like. Is better here than some teachers you meet in the kursraum. Thanks so much.
If 'I thank you' is 'Ich danke dir' then why 'I miss you' is 'Du fehlst mir'? I mean in both the sentences I (Ich) is the Subject and you (Dir) is the Object. because I am thanking and missing and you are being thanked and missed. please explain. Erklären Sie bitte!
Hi Kanwal, in the sentence: Ich danke dir - "ich" is Nominativ Subjekt, Dir ist Dativ Objekt In the sentence: Du fehlst mir - "Du" is Nominativ and "mir" is the Dativ Objekt (Du fehlst mir - the exact word to word translation would be - I am lacking you. But one doesn't say that)
Learn German after some study I got to learn that Du fehlst mir means you are lacking in my life. that makes Du a nominativ subjekt and mir a dative objekt.
great videos it help me to answer the question why we has some cases using dativ instead of akkusativ how many Dativ verds do we have in German? i guess the number of it is smaller than akkusativ?
+Huynh minh thong Hi. Thank you! You are right, there are more verbs with Akkusative than with Dative. The verbs in this video are the most common Dative Verbs. We will be doing some more soon :-)
Sie haben gesagt: "dieser Hut gefällt mir" and " dieses Buch gehört meinem Bruder" , sind 'dieser und dieses' Deklination von Adjektiv? Ob es wie so ist, können Sie bitte weiter erklären, vielleicht mit einem Video? Und letze Frage: warum haben Sie dekliniert? Es gibt kein Adjektiv... oder gibt es? Es tut mir leid, mein Deutsch ist noch schlecht! Ich hoffe meine Fragen ganz klar waren!! Danke für super hilfreich Videos!
alesandara weistdu warum ) dieser hut ist rictig weil der artikel für hut ist der hut des wegen benutsman dieser hut) und dieses buch euch der artikel für das buch ist das buch . ich wünsche dir das du verstanden hat
Why German doesn't have progressive verb conjugations? "Ich gehe jetzt" can be both "I go now" or "I'm going now" Ps: thank you very much for all your videos they're helping a lot but I have this doubt because of languages are very interesting.
antworten danken begegnen -- to meet fehlen -- to miss gefallen -- to please gehören -- to belong glauben -- to believe gratulieren -- to congratulate helfen passen -- to fit Nominativ subjekt and dative objekt raten -- to suggest schaden -- to damage Gesundheit -- health schmecken -- to taste vertrauen -- to trust weh tun -- to hurt
"Die Pizza schmeckt uns sehr gut" What's stopping you from saying "Die Pizza schmeckt sehr gut zu uns", by chance? Is that an acceptable phrasing or must the dative object follow the verb directly?
Small doubt: why do we say, “ich vertraue dir!” and “ich liebe dich”. Why not, “ich liebe dir”? Because vertraue is Dativ verb and liebe is accusative? But how do I figure out if it’s Dativ or accusative? Only by remembering or any other logic? Please clarify?
Dieses Kleid passt mir nicht. Ich danke dir für deine Hilfe. Du fehlst mir. Dieser Hut gefällt mir. Ich glaube dir nicht. Ich vertraue dir. Mein fuß tut mir weh.
no sorry she is right !! du fehst mir = i miss you , i know it's not like english but just take it like that ( it's exaclty as in the french language! )
The phrase "Du fehlst mir" directly translates to "You are missing to me" in English. However, the more idiomatic and common translation of this phrase is "I miss you."
du fehlst mir , seems to mean you miss me and , ich fehlst dir meant i miss you , google translate confirmed , i dont know if the video is wrong or the expression is like this in Germany :(
I wonder why the verb "begegnen" must be followed by Dativ in German. It seems rater illogical, as the meaning is 'to meet, to encounter somebody or something' - it's ACCUSATIV!