Added: 1 year ago
From: DeutschOnlineLernen
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  • DAS KLINGT WIE EINE FLÖTE ! WAS IST DAS  FUCK MAN NE FLÖTE :D KLINGT RICHTIG WITZIG HAHAHAHAH

  • Als deutscher hört sich dass bisschen komisch an xD

    Vorallem wennman bayer is...^^

  • an by the way: the plural form of klavier is klavierE .ein klavier, zwei klavierE!

  • because its a kasus-rule! genitiv! wessen klang? der klang eineS klavierS. (genitiv demands the S, U cant say eines klavier) look it up on wikipedia: kasus in der deutschen sprache. cheers

  • Hello, Thank you for making this useful video. I dont know why you guys put plural nouns like "Klaviers" in this sentence: "Das ist der Klang eines Klaviers ". Why Klaviers is in plural form? May I use this sentence "Das ist der Klang eines Klavier" ? Vielen Dank !

  • Good, I like that you share this video In lesson 19 we will practice all nominative and genitive forms of the indefinite article, I wish success always

  • Nice Video Hello and welcome to German 1. In lesson 19 we will practice all nominative and genitive forms of the indefinite article That You Share , So Very Nice Thanks You

  • I Really Like The Video Hello and welcome to German 1. In lesson 19 we will practice all nominative and genitive forms of the indefinite article. Enjoy the video From Your

  • Your Video Hello and welcome to German 1. In lesson 19 we will practice all nominative and genitive forms of the indefinite article. Is Very Useful Sharing

  • So glad I'm Dutch, lived in the U.S. for 5 years and have bilingual education (Dutch/english). Lots of things in dutch are extremely similar to german and the things that aren't are either similar to french or to english so that leaves like 9 words that I actually have to learn. :)

  • "Das klingt wie ein Bass." Why isnt it: "Das klingen wie ein Bass." ? Please help!

  • @furoman1 "Das is third-person singular, so the conjugation of klingen would be klingt", just like with all other regular verbs.

  • Fantastic. Really enjoyable. Thanks so much. I wish there were more.

  • I badly regret not paying much attention in my own language and sucking at it!!!! :@

    It has a million type of Objects including Accusative and Dative and if I was good at the grammars, I would easily master German grammars! But sad for me, I suck at them!

  • Als deutscher frage ich mich auch manchmal, wie schwierig es wäre meine eigene Sprache als Amerikaner/ Engländer / Australier etc. zu lernen. Von meinem Gefühl und der Grammatik her ist Deutsch einfacher.

  • @StefW14

    Insoweit ich mich mit diversen Sprachen befasst habe, dürfte Deutsch eine der unregelmässigsten, umständlichsten und am schwersten zu lernenden Sprachen überhaupt sein...90% muss auswendig gelernt werden, jede Regel hat 100 Ausnahmen, es gibt zig verschiedene Pluralendungen, flexierte Verben, fast alle unregelmässig, 3 Geschlechter, usw., usw.

  • @HesseJamez Ja Deutsch ist echt schwer...Aber wenn man damit aufgewachsen ist, ist das wircklich leicht (;

  • @HesseJamez

    Jetzt wo ich meinen Kommentar noch einmal lese, fällt mir auf das ich das alles ein wenig umständlich formuliert habe. Ich wollte eigentlich nur sagen, dass z.B. Englisch leichter zu erlernen ist als Deutsch, ich als Muttersprachler aber kein direktes Empfinden für die Schwierigkeit meiner Sprache habe.

  • Crimen Sollicitationis

  • 17 more days and i will watch this =)

    btw, is this the last one?

    if so, why? D:

    

  • More More Bitte More!

  • Deutsche Sprache,schwere Sprache würde ich da mal sagen!Aber echt,die labern da nur Wörter und man soll diese dann nachsprechen?So lernt man doch kein Deutsch! X)

  • @26Theophilus

    Naja es geht da um das Verständnis der Grammatik. Deutsch kann man dann natürlich nicht. Um eine Sprache zu sprechen, muss man vor allem Vokabeln lernen.

  • Gutes Weinachten!

    Ein gutes neues Jahr!

  • hey do you know how to say "Merry Christmas" and "Happy New Year" in German really anyone can answer!

  • @tomandbill4ever1

    there are many possibilities xD

    'merry christmas' -> frohe weihnachten! [...]

    'happy new year' -> [we often say 'happy new year i german, too ;)] schönes neues jahr! / einen guten rutsch in das neue jahr!! / frohes neues jahr!

  • @tomandbill4ever1

    Frohe Weihnachten

    Frohes neues Jahr

    those two are very common :)

  • @deimuader thank you!

  • thanks for this, it's done well (if slightly slowly..) and your intonations of the words make vocab. etc. easier to remember - nice one! :)

  • Danke! Ich liebe Deutsche!!!

  • @mbaquara ich auf...

  • @holly1849 und Ich liebe die deutsche frau auf... LOL

  • just have some confusions: when can we say that the object that we want to say is a genitive?I'm a bit confuse or shall I say it became feminine if the one who speak is a woman or a man. lot of your object has genitive equivalent so how will I used it properly? danke shon.

  • Thanks a lot for these vids, I have been struggling the last week in classes because being a course in Germany, the entire lessons are in German! Now it's very clear! Thanks again :) Toll!

  • no problem, you're welcome

  • @ ElectronicLover80... Thank you !

  • ich is nominative, mich is accusative, mir is dative ... du is nominative, dich is accusative, dir is dative ... nominative = doing the action, accusative = receiving the action, dative = to/with whom, genetive = possession/relationship 

  • @ElectronicLover80

    Das ist der Klang einer Flöte.

    Is it possible to say?:

    Das ist Klang von Flöte.

    vielen danke.

  • @MrEkatmali No, you can't say that. You don't say "that's the sound of flute" in English, either, because it seems as if you're talking about a person called "Flute". "Das ist der Klang von einer Flöte" wouldn't sound as wrong, but really only "Das ist der Klang einer Flöte" is correct. "von einer" is acceptable in colloquial language (it's dative), but only the genitive "einer Flöte" is entirely correct in formal language.

  • @Kreloar (hehe, if you're in germany, nobody cares if you say 'von einer' oder 'einer'. most of my classmates who don't have latin don't even know that there is a difference xD)

  • @thekleeblaettchen Das ist mir durchaus bewusst.

  • @ElectronicLover80 That seems an awful lot like latin. Anyone else know of any similarities between German and Latin? (As far as gramatic concepts work)

  • @ElectronicLover80 Thanks !

  • Is this the last of the series or will you be posting further lessons ???

    I hope that it will be the latter, and if so, then when can we expect them????

    I am sure I speak for many, but we are really looking forward to future lessons.

    I would be interested to know when we are supposed to use ich, mich, dich, mir, dir, etc etc.... please help clarify ...

    Many thanks x

  • Hi ! This is the first time ever I am commenting on any post on you tube. I have registered just so that I could send a comment regarding your post.

    Thank You Sooooooooooo much for these uploads. They were really just fantstic!

    After years of self learning and Mama lernt Deutsch groups, no-one was ever really able to explain the rules behind when to use meinen, meiner, meinem, seinem etc etc.... Well Done! It all seems to make a lot more sense now!

  • Vielen danke! like it all!

  • Sehr interessant, ich werde diese Seite meinen Schülern empfehlen!!!

  • Vielen danke!

  • Super! Danke!

  • Danke!

  • Danke!

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