Also ich find das gut dass alles gesagt wird, ich mein wer deutsch lernen will sollte auch alles kennen, auch wenn man es kaum gebraucht. ist ja bei uns mit englisch genau so, wir lernen in der schule auch dinge die man kaum sagen würde^^ oder?^^
@guitarobsessed85 "du kannst mich.." Is the objective part of the sentence, meaning that the person asking the person questioning is saying "you can (blank)". "Mich" is the accusative form of ich. Nennen is the verb for name. This sentence literally means "you can name me (blank)", more correctly "you can call me (blank). So you could say "Du kannst mich John nennen": "You can call me John." Although, if being this formal you might want to say "Sie koennen mich John nennen."
@Mollumbus Ich stimm zu. Aber es ist nicht leicht zu erklaeren wie verscheiden Deutsch sein koennte. Beispiel: Als ich erst in Deutshland war, hab ich gar nichts verstanden, als ich mit einen Saxoner gesprochen habe. Ich weiss ja dass die Dialekten sind oft verwirrt, aber es gibts auch schwer "slang" Worten die zu einem Ami sehr besheut anhoert.
the worst quality its hard to hear all the subtlties in the voice so many german words sound alike to its important that you hear every sylablle apart for the other
@gunsnrosesrocks877 the character that appears to be a B is actually an s-zet, which represents two S's (ss) together. A single "s" in the German language sounds more like the pronounciation of the English "c". The s-zet is becoming more and more uncommon to see in writing, however it continues to be taught to those beginning to learn the language.
@gunsnrosesrocks877 the character appearing as a "B" is actually an s-zet. In the German language a single "s" allots the pronounciation similar to English's "c". Therefore a double S (or s-zet) is required to create our version of "s". This specific character is becoming less and less common, although it is still taught to those beginning to learn the language. Also, this character can only be used when following a short vowel and not an umlauted vowel.
german freakin hard !
arikakakaaa96 4 months ago
thanks helped alot but ya lose the music :):):):):)
summergirl69283 6 months ago
Jag älskar det här språket <3 :')
LoveuOzzy 8 months ago
man lernt das wichtigste: Frauen anbaggern!
if you understand that you're good!
MisterMist1000 8 months ago
It makes me so happy to see that americans are learning german and actually care about our country and language.
Shyreenify 9 months ago
Hello in the Ruhrpott :
"Hast du'n Problem oder watt !?"
Listen and repeat.
FunkySkunk90 9 months ago
very helpful thx
Mw2HRgameplayvids2 10 months ago
this is right german:
Hans: jo, Digga wat geht
Merlin: alles was beine hat und bei dir?
Hans: jo auch, ey muss los ne, hau rein digga
DjToNiGhTt 10 months ago
Well done. Useful content.
But
a) Presented a bit too quickly for effective "repeat drills".
b) The background noise distracts the student.
c) Need to distinguish between 2nd/3rd person (familiar/formal usage) and when each is appropriate.
michaelbyrnes2012 11 months ago
lllllll
attakcen 1 year ago
Here is an example of German greetings being used in conversation:
Norbert: Guten Tag! Herzlich willkommen! Mein Name ist Pohle, Norbert Pohle. Und wie ist Ihr Name?
Englisch: Good day! Welcome! My name is Pohle, Norbert Pohle. And what's your name?
Sabine: Sabine Zimmermann.
Norbert: Und Sie? Wie heißen Sie?
Englisch: And you? What's your name?
Antonio: Ich heiße Antonio Coletti.
Englisch: My name is Antonio Coletti.
Ari: Und ich bin Ari Pappas.
Ari: And I am Ari Pappas.
USCSoundCheck 1 year ago
Ich liebe sprechen Deutsch! Mein Vater lehrte mich, wie.
l4dfan8 1 year ago
Also ich find das gut dass alles gesagt wird, ich mein wer deutsch lernen will sollte auch alles kennen, auch wenn man es kaum gebraucht. ist ja bei uns mit englisch genau so, wir lernen in der schule auch dinge die man kaum sagen würde^^ oder?^^
Boondox1991 1 year ago
dobro je ovo da ucis njemacki.... this is good to learn german if u dont know how and u want to..............
amra4956 1 year ago
OMG this is so helpful im taking german in 6th grade
Octopi101 1 year ago
can't hear the speech over the loud music
runly1 1 year ago
Jetzt weiß ich, schön, wie man Deutsch
TheZStryker 1 year ago
so random
halo3rocks100123 1 year ago
I have a question "Du Kannst mich _____ nennen" when literally translated means, "can you give me ____"?
guitarobsessed85 1 year ago
@guitarobsessed85 "du kannst mich.." Is the objective part of the sentence, meaning that the person asking the person questioning is saying "you can (blank)". "Mich" is the accusative form of ich. Nennen is the verb for name. This sentence literally means "you can name me (blank)", more correctly "you can call me (blank). So you could say "Du kannst mich John nennen": "You can call me John." Although, if being this formal you might want to say "Sie koennen mich John nennen."
CommanderSeagal 1 year ago
@guitarobsessed85 "Du kannst mich ___ nennen" means literally you can call me ___.
Du kannst = you can
mich = me
nennen = to call so. s.th.
Good luck :D
Moshikashitenai 1 year ago
Isn't "wie geht es dir" informal? When is it appropriate to use the informal form. I thought informal can only be used in certain circumstances
guitarobsessed85 1 year ago
german is gona b so hard this year
deej567 1 year ago
Way to fast to learn anything here!
chino1922 1 year ago
Seit wann sind Sachen wie "bist du verheiratet?" Begrüßungen?!?
Ich spreche jetzt gleich mal ein paar fremde Leute an mit "Sie kam letzten Monat an", mal sehen was dabei rauskommt :P
Übrigens: pancakes = PFANNkuchen, nicht Pfannenkuchen
Mollumbus 1 year ago
@Mollumbus Ich stimm zu. Aber es ist nicht leicht zu erklaeren wie verscheiden Deutsch sein koennte. Beispiel: Als ich erst in Deutshland war, hab ich gar nichts verstanden, als ich mit einen Saxoner gesprochen habe. Ich weiss ja dass die Dialekten sind oft verwirrt, aber es gibts auch schwer "slang" Worten die zu einem Ami sehr besheut anhoert.
CommanderSeagal 1 year ago
@CommanderSeagal
*lol* Saxon is not the worst - have you ever been in Bavaria or Switzerland?
HesseJamez 1 year ago
das is doch schrott -.-
wer sagt denn schon: das ist mein bester freund!?
irgendwie bin ich froh deutsch sprechen zu können...ich denk das es für andere sehr schwierig ist wegen unserer scheiß grammatik!
mit dem dutzen und siezen und 3. person singular und 2. person plural usw.
VG an alle die deutsch lernen wollen ;)
keksdose600 1 year ago
@keksdose600
Schrott ist, wenn man andere pauschal kritisiert und es selbst nicht besser kann...
"das" in "ich denk das" schreibt man übrigens mit "Doppel-s"!
sloveniaholidays 1 year ago
gut, besser, Gösser!
csengeri 1 year ago
hallo, wie geht es dir
MW2ticktock650MW2 1 year ago
the worst quality its hard to hear all the subtlties in the voice so many german words sound alike to its important that you hear every sylablle apart for the other
PhoneLad 1 year ago
lol wtf
So lernt niemand deutsch.
viel zu wenig beleidigungen.
Subjekt, prädikat, Beleidigung, Alter
jaqueslacroix 2 years ago
Guten Abend
KudoBrothers 2 years ago
"Lass mich dich einigen Freunden vorstellen" - ROFLMAO! Wer sagt denn sowas? Rosamunde Pilcher?!
chargonchar 2 years ago 6
@chargonchar Ich bin Ausländer und würde es so sagen. Wie sagt man eigentlich?
Zerstorter 4 months ago
@Zerstorter
Grammatikalisch ist es schon korrekt, es klingt bloß sehr verkrampft.
chargonchar 3 months ago
@chargonchar Achso... das ist mir leider verwirrend. hahaha du hast doch Glück, in DE geboren zu haben! hahaha
Zerstorter 3 months ago
Very helpful, but lose the obnoxious background music. Especially distracting when you're trying to hear someone speak!
whydidyouresign 2 years ago 12
we hear this music on the privatized toilets all day.
chargonchar 2 years ago
Ich nicht sprechen gut deutsch.
mein deutsch ist verdammte scheiße! :P
terrantry 2 years ago 4
LOL
Death2allismyBitch 2 years ago
hahahahahahahaha!
WIE IST IHR NAME!!!
hahahahahahahahahahaha
Wie heißen sie!!!! so is das richtig! hahahahahahahaha
GaetanoNr1 2 years ago
ok thanks
gunsnrosesrocks877 2 years ago
DANKE
gunsnrosesrocks877 2 years ago 3
one more question when u say wie heibt du does it is supose to sound like there a s in it
gunsnrosesrocks877 2 years ago
Yes!
sloveniaholidays 2 years ago
"Wie heißt du?" is the same as "Wie heisst du" except that "heißt" is the offical spelling. (To type "ß" just hold Alt and press 0223.)
MNsnowskater2112 2 years ago
or alt and 225
timeparadox 2 years ago
@MNsnowskater2112 "Alt 225" much faster
pope0331 1 year ago
@pope0331 Or to type it even faster, just change your keyboard settings to "United States-International" and hold "alt" then hit "s."
nichtmuttersprachler 1 year ago
@gunsnrosesrocks877 the character that appears to be a B is actually an s-zet, which represents two S's (ss) together. A single "s" in the German language sounds more like the pronounciation of the English "c". The s-zet is becoming more and more uncommon to see in writing, however it continues to be taught to those beginning to learn the language.
CommanderSeagal 1 year ago
@gunsnrosesrocks877 the character appearing as a "B" is actually an s-zet. In the German language a single "s" allots the pronounciation similar to English's "c". Therefore a double S (or s-zet) is required to create our version of "s". This specific character is becoming less and less common, although it is still taught to those beginning to learn the language. Also, this character can only be used when following a short vowel and not an umlauted vowel.
CommanderSeagal 1 year ago
@gunsnrosesrocks877
do not mix up our ß with a capital B !
ß = ss (sharp s-noise)
HesseJamez 1 year ago
how do u say pancakes in german? :D
XxMiseryBiznessxX 2 years ago
pancakes in german is:
Die Pfannenkuchen
sloveniaholidays 2 years ago
yayayayaya!
thnx
XxMiseryBiznessxX 2 years ago
excuse me
the book i got it said guten tag means hello
gunsnrosesrocks877 2 years ago
@sloveniaholidays lmao such a long word for such a little thing. :p
i see that a lot of things have "die" in front of them.. it means "the" right?
berrysweetx3 1 year ago
@sloveniaholidays
Pfannekuchen ! -
HesseJamez 1 year ago
i wana go ther someday :)
but all my frends say i cant learn kuz im only 13 Xl
ima prove them wrong!!!
XxMiseryBiznessxX 2 years ago
im gonna make myself some good flash cards to learn these :)
then im gonna get rosetta stone lol
OnePairAces 2 years ago
Thank you for the lesson. The only downpoint of the video is that the music is a bit too loud.. Is it possible to volume it down?
The rest is awesome :)
AgnieszkaD1990 3 years ago
This is good but I hope they'd take away the background music as it's distracting.
alvindurochermtl 3 years ago
hello, i bet you cant say this in german!!!
hallo, Ich wette, man kann sagen, das in Deutsch!
COPY AND PASTE EVERYWHERE
Kopieren und überall
oilerz4eva 3 years ago
you might be right oilerz4eva, coz the sentence is wrong in german...:P
Aphrophis 2 years ago
Guten Abend means good evening
Guten Tag means good day
but
you say it for good afternoon
sloveniaholidays 3 years ago
i thought guten arben means good afternoon and guten tag means good day
Michaelb3567 3 years ago
In deutsch/German:
Nun, ich bin deutscher und es ist eigentlich ganz gut.
In englisch/english:
well, It is actually OK
buzz0097 3 years ago
ok that's not the only reason lol.
AmebixDistortion 3 years ago 2
its too fast that's why
AmebixDistortion 3 years ago 2
seems hard
Iceprincess702 3 years ago 2