Added: 2 years ago
From: RepublicofSocialismZ
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  • danke, Ihnen geholfen mich so sehr mit dem Deutsch-Nummern Ich habe gerade angefangen Deutsch lernen gestern im amerikanischen. Haben Sie einen Rat für mich?

  • DANKE...EST HILFEN MIR!!!!!

  • Comment removed

  • There's a mistake at 1:33.

    "Twentey is wrong.

    Twenty is the good.

  • @Bobojsza84 In regard to my responce to Jenpequena, I don't really care. I'm pleased, however, that you can spell.

  • 21 should be einundzwanzig, not einsundzwanzig.

    There is no "s" between "n"&"u".

  • @roselsy1992 Well, I'm lazy but did manage to have an annotation set to detail the omition of the letter "s" from that slide. At least it works for me, idk, I just winged it. Thanks though.

  • this helped me alot

  • I'm learning German (but I am piss-ant poor so I do not go to classes) this way very helpful. Danke Schon!

  • @Jenpequena ok...

  • Shouldn't it be "danke?"

  • @ariddikulusriddle where do you mean?

  • @RepublicofSocialismZ are you a native english speaker? or german?

  • @TheDarkstar010 english

  • @RepublicofSocialismZ he means thank you

  • @PARTICLEZXz I know what danke means -_-

    I think he's confused on the part where I said, "Denke das ist alles" in which I used the 1st Person Conjugation of the infinative: Denken, in which the word "ich" doesn't necessarily have to be before. So, "I think that's everything" - not, "Thanks, that's everything."

  • @RepublicofSocialismZ haha lol i only came here to learn how to count to ten...

  • NICE you count in the same way in dansih .. ein-und-zwanzig .. danish: en-og-tyve... makes it alot easier :)

  • Danke. Wonderbar!

  • It would help people to also list the numbers and number rules in the description of your video. Feel free to copy and paste this. 0- null 1- eins 2- zwei 3- drei 4- vier 5- fünf 6- sechs 7- sieben 8- acht 9- neun 10- zehn 11-elf 12- zwölf 13- dreizehn 14-vierzehn 15- fünfzehn 16- sechzehn 17- siebzehn 18- achtzehn 19- neunzehn 20- zwanzig. The number 21 through 99 are formed by combining the numbers 1-9 with 20-90. 21- einundzwanzig...

    German uses a period/space instead of a comma like 7 000.

  • @Rocky3590 np, and Viel Glück in Oktoberfest!

  • Comment removed

  • @OoMisguidedGhostsoO well ontop of my school and daily grievances, whenever i have the spare time to find a way to actually record, i'll gladly do a voice over.

  • 0:23 roll the R??? Germans don't roll the R!

  • @SammyTheHedhehog @SammyTheHedhehog Rolling of The R is sometimes per person, but there are regions of Germany [And Austria] of which the regional dialect holds the Rolling or just because of regional pronunciation. I have been to Austria, a perfect example of this is my friend who speaks Kaiserdeutsch, very sophisticated and he Rolls his R's incredibly. [Wienersprache as a whole is thick]. Um meine Erfahrung, ich weiß es geht nicht für jedermand.

  • @RepublicofSocialismZ yeah, but there is a MAIN GERMAN DIALECT called Hochdeutsch. It's something that doesn't exists in the English language (there are many official dialects). Hochdeutsch is the "right" German.

  • @SammyTheHedhehog Yes, ofcourse. But i think you've misunderstood what i ment by rolling the R, perhaps i should've said "trill." Understanding how english speakers simply leave the R sharp in pronunciation [U.S. Standard English] and it would sound off to say "Dry". I didn't mean you "roll" like "rrrr" in EVERY word, and not even in this one.

  • @SammyTheHedhehog: That depends on the region. There are three possible pronunciations for "r" in Germany: [r] (voiced alevolar vibrant - typical rolling "r"), [ʀ] (voiced uvular vibrant - vibrating uvula) and [ʁ] (voiced uvular fricative - uvula nor vibrating). All three are free allophones meaning they are equally valid. [r] is used almost exclusively in southern Germany, though.

    At the end of syllables "r" often is pronounced [ɐ̯] after long vocals, [ɐ] if the syllable ends on unstressed -er.

  • @albedoshader: The German Language is pluricentric, there is no general and valid-for-all-speakers rule. Austria and Switzerland have partly differing standards of pronunciation, spelling and vocabulary. Think about Austrian "Jänner" vs. German "Januar", for example.

  • blitzine da da da da  reichstag da da da da blitzkrieg daa daaa da da daa da da hitler nazi germany normady

  • @MrGoldman83 Da = there Blitzine = not a real word Reichstag = Capital Building Blitzkrieg = Lightning War Hitler = Imbicile Nazi = Shameful regime Germany = Country in europe Normandy = Frenchies You get an A+ on the random dumbass meter, good for you! :D Jetzt zählen Sie 'was oder dich selbst töten =P
  • @RepublicofSocialismZ shut the hell up i was joking stupid retard that proves you have no humor

  • @MrGoldman83 Yes, maybe i do not have any humour that acompanies your taste.

    I just don't find anything this random and non-pertaining to counting, such things as mentioning Hitler, being spouted as "funny". What the heck is with all the "da"s?

  • @MrGoldman83 it was a song

  • thnx dude

  • cool this is just like spanish!!! woopeee!!!!

    now i know english spanish german and french

  • @FRIZZYizzi4 just like spanish how?

  • @RepublicofSocialismZ well after 20 all u said u have to do is add and to the middle of the two digit numbers

    example i guess....ein + funfzig = ein/und/funfzig....und....and

    example 4 span.....uno + veinte = veinte/i/uno .........i.............and

  • @FRIZZYizzi4 there are many languages that have "and" in their counting system. I thought you ment the two language groups themselves, not the process in which they count.

  • You say "Sieb'zig" and not "Siebenzig", that's right!

    

  • @schluchz ok, danke :D

  • I was talking to xPancakes

  • @Sk8terBMX12 oh sry. i hate this new setup. my missunderstanding.

  • @RepublicofSocialismZ It is ok, lol. We all make mistakes.

  • no, its elf, zwolf, driezehn, you dont get into the -zehns until you get to the teens in english. teen=zehn.

  • @Sk8terBMX12 What do you mean? Zehn is in acting as -teen. Elf, Zwölf, Dreizehn.... that's what i got.

  • i though 11 12 13 was einszehn, zweizehn, dreizehn, etc?????

  • Nope, because 11 and twelve are not followed by "-teen". They're their own numbers just like in english, "eleven, twelve." We don't say, "eleveteen, twelvteen".

    Good question though. Viel glück!

  • oh, danke. :)

  • Lol. But 13 is right...its 3+10 basically.

  • @xPancakes4lyf No, its Zehn, Elf, Zwolf, Dreizehn because Twelve && eleven arent __teen. Exactly like Rebublic of socialism said :3.

  • @xPancakes4lyf No! Zehn starts at the number 13 in German. It's like in English how we say Thir-teen. Counting is really easy in German. 20 is Zwanzig. To say 21 in German it'd be like saying "1 and 20"...so you would say "Einundzwanzig." For 22 "Zweiundzwanzig", 28 "Achtundzwanzig" and so on. :)

  • tar m8, hard to find places searchin that gives u this, and babble fish dnt recognise all the numbers.

  • there no s in german 21

  • Oh my, thanks. That's a typo :( i did this very late haha.

    Thanks.

  • Gracias amigo! 5 stars! Will you subscribe to my vids? Take care Coach Cory

  • not bad^^ wie lange lernst du schon deutsch?

    ps. actually its not

    sechszig siebenzig & achtzig you write

    sechzig siebzig & achzig

    you don't pronounce the last letter and just attach the ``tsik´´

    aaand 30 (dreißig) you don't so ``tsik´´ but sick dry-sick

    the best way i can explain this =)

  • @doenna1 Danke sehr, ich war verwirrt um 60 und 80 auch :)

    Und es ist die erste Zeit ich hab Dreißig gesehn, danke :)

    I hab "wirklich" für zwei Jahren lernen gewesen.

  • Gut arbeit, Kumpel!

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