All videos mentioned are linked below in the description and don't forget to go to our website and grab your FREE PDF list in the eBook section: www.yourgermanteacher.com
Watched all of your A1 videos for 25 days and took the exam after. Got the result today and I passed! Thank you so so so much Luzi and Johannes!!!! You guys are the best! ❤
Agreed! German Lessons with Herr Ferguson is also very good. Like this channel, he explains German grammar in English - aimed at A1-B2, or GCSE to A-Level++
This does it. Been following your channel along with many others since I began learning, German in 2020, and you guys are indisputably the best German teachers RU-vid has to offer. Thank you so much for what you do - absolutely love and value your content immensely
Ich habe gerade das kostenlose PDF heruntergeladen. Vielen Dank für Ihre Bemühungen und Rücksichtnahme, Sie sind die besten Deutschlehrer aller Zeiten 😍😍😍.
Hi, I love your videoes! They are always useful when there is something I haven't quite grasped yet ❤. I just have two questions for you: 1. Where can I find the Göethe vocabulary list? I find these statistics you use extremely interesting but I have not been able to find it on the internet for some reason 2. How can it be that the word "bleiben" has the auxillary verb "sein"? There is a lack of movement and I don't see how staying would be a "change of state". I know the verb is right because we also use "to be" in my mother tongue (Danish) but yeah, I am just curious to the reason why it's "sein" and not "haben" Have a good day :)
😊🙏 Just google "Goethe Zertifikat [your level] Wortliste". The movement or change in state/condition can be applied for most. But it's German... and there are always exceptions... 🙃
@@yourgermanteacher Thx for the quick answer! 😁 I have a German test tomorrow that I am hoping to ace, so this knowledge will definitely come in handy (even if the rules can be a bit weird / nonexistent sometimes 😂)
you're the best German teacher ever. I learned German thanks to you. I'm almost out of b1 now. I can easily talk about any topic. You have helped me a lot. Keep doing the holy work:)
Das ist perfekt. Can I ask if possible a video about the difference between almost similar words , like (sich befassen mit, sich beschäftigen mit), (beschließen, entscheiden),(klagen über, leiden an). Vielen Dank.
Hi ,i m your new subscrieber .your class is very appriciated .Could you do a viedeo about , how to use these Konjunktiv (hätte ,würde ,wäre )with conditional clauses . Thank you
13:43 Das ist nicht sehr häufig da es so teuer ist, ein Auto in Deutschland zu haben. Aber auf der anderen Seite sind die Drahtesel unsere besten Freunde. Danke schön👍
Hallo lieber Luzi, könntet ihr bitte künftig ein Vedio über den Konjunktiv2 machen. Es wäre sehr hilfreich nicht nur für mich,sondern für alle. Dein Deutschstudent Rifa
Hello I watch your videos and they are informative. Thank you. Can you tell me where can I practice what I have lernt e.g. material websites where I can practice. Hoping for your early reply. Thanks in advance
Hi Lutzi, thank yoz for the pdf. Is there a chance to get a video and a list with all the verbs come with "sich"? how many are them exist verbs+sich verbs? thank you!
Hello Sir I'm from India. I want to learn German this is a request that can you start the german course series from beginner A1 to C2 step by step so we can learn german faster and easier from you and will give Exam this will help me to make a good career in german language
Did you realize you said "have went" in your English? Many poorly educated English speakers say this nowadays but of course it's wrong. Maybe in another 100 years the preterite form will have replaced the past perfect but it's not time yet for a teacher to use it! Der deutsche Teil hat mir doch sehr gefallen.
Yes it's like wegen moving from genitive to dative except in the plural and using weil like denn and not moving the verb to the end of the phrase. Having worked in Germany in the early 70s compared to visiting now or watching RU-vid in German, these changes have come in. Just look at how the use of geil has evolved. I never would have used that in polite company back then!
@@JefftheSabaDude although one thing i've recently noticed about my english that is a bit concerning. I contract most words that can be contracted, and so I've started saying things incorrectly without realising. For example, when I want to say "where has it gone?", i'll go "where's it gone?" which is fine. But sometimes I'll say "where IS it gone", which is incorrect, but it sounds very similar to the contraction "where's". So Interesting how it can happen
With the "has gone" version many native speakers would say "where's it gone to," emphasizing the verbal action of gone. It seems that many of these old Germanic/Nordic root verbs have maintained a special use in English by still using be in the compound past...he is gone, the Lord is come (church talk.) So the verbal form is serving more like an adjective. In the scenario where a husband has left his wife, she'd exclaim "He IS gone for good" rather than using HAS when emphasizing to a person who doesn't believe her that he is really gone and not coming back. So I think "where is it gone to" emphasizing is without using the contraction would also be said by a native speaker. Interesting as I had never thought about this one!