German Class Comedy: German Verbs!🤣🇩🇪🇺🇸
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- čas přidán 10. 03. 2024
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And that was just an easy example... 😄
Broo we need more your German lesson videos
I just started learning German 3 weeks ago .
As a native speaker I am glad not to have to learn German, but learning Russian, even as an advanced student, is the same struggle. So I feel with you 😊
И как твои успехи? Как впечатления?
@@Sargatanas Руслан язык очень красивый, но и одновременно очень сложный. В принципе надо каждый день заниматься, либо читать что-то, либо смотреть что-то и, очень важно, разговаривать. И при этом слушать, как носители языка говорят 🙂
*русский язык
Native English speaker here…I made the mistake of attempting to learn German, French, and Arabic, all in the same go…it didn’t work so well.
@@claudiabeckercb3неплохо
This has triggered my PTSD from when I learned German.
I’m now a lot more fluent, but sometimes I need buffering time to make sense of what I’m hearing, saying, writing and speaking.
Glitches are still commonplace though, but I’m hoping they’ll be worked out of my brain eventually.
the thing is, if you add the "zu" in the word, the second "zu" is the newly added, the first "zu" is the existing one. You don't just put one in front.
So words like anfangen, will result in anzufangen.
I'm so done here...
I remember this ❤
And what does that mean ?
@@lopamudraray4571 one means " towards" and the other one is just grammar.
In Englisch it's even more obvious, the infinitiv form of any verb is, to stand, to be, to listen. In german this only comes back in feflexive forms.
Second thing is too. Both is to in german both is written as zu.
That's why you have this frequent use.
It makes perfect zusense
:-)
Do the verbs "prügeln" und "schlagen" mean the same thing?
Yes, of course!
Then why do people always laugh when I say "es hat 12 Uhr geprügelt?"
Prügeln nur gegen Wesen, schlagen gegen alles.
Just in case your comment wasn't just meant as a joke:
"Prügeln" und "schlagen" both have mutliple meanings (with "schlagen" being more versatile), which only partially overlap. In the clock example, only "schlagen" is correct (here, as a synonym for "läuten").
Another fun example: "jemanden durchprügeln" means "to beat up someone badly", while "etwas durchprügeln" can also mean "to force something into completion" (not necessarily by physical force), "schlagen" is not applicable in these combinations.
"Sich durchschlagen" means "to muddle yourself through" (to a destinastion or out of a situation), "sich mit etwas herumschlagen" means "to have to cope with something"; you cannot use "prügeln" in these cases.
I feel with you
Actually, I get the “I want to watch,” since zu is cognate with to, which English puts in front of words since we lost the infinitive form, so it translates literally. It also works the same way in French: Je veux regarder. Subject, auxiliary verb conjugated, infinitive.
I disagree. The zu in zuschauen means "at", not "to". "Zuschauen" is more like "to look at". The second zu in zuzuschauen means "to" tho. (Ich mag es zuzuschauen = I like to look at, literally).
My mother tongue is not English, so could you please elaborate when you say that English lost its infinitive form? What was that infinitive form?
@@ashnecko It's not like that modern day English had an infinite form, but it's predecessors had. You can still see that in German: schauen: to watch, ich schaue: I watch, du schaust: you watch... you see, in German, there's different forms whereas English only has one. For the predecessors of todays English, these different versions may have also existed but got lost during the development of the language.
@@WSandig many thanks for the explanation.
Dont know how I learned this, but I did.
now do "umfahren". 😏
❤❤❤❤
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Yes and fangt an is another no pattern issue.
German grammar rules r so ez 0:08
Btw im first
Jesus Christ, this teacher has no patience! Worst guy to teach!
Copy and paste, ROTFL
Well, as an Aussi i have to tell you: Before you try German, learn English please. Thanks.
😂😂😂😂😂