I have a 99 in German, and I'm not even a native speaker. Probably bcuz I'm Romanian and people from Romania learn languages really easily bcuz of the diverse background of the language. Either way, my teacher gives us videos on this channel and they match what he says pretty much exactly.
Lektion sechsunddreißig Personalpronomen (Dativ) = personal pronouns (dative) • ich = I • mir = me • Hi. Ich bin Maria. = Hi. I am Maria. • Gibst du mir eine Schokolade? = Will you give me a chocolate? • du = you • dir = you • Anna, du bist nett. = Anna, you are nice. • Ich gebe dir eine Schokolade. = I will give you a chocolate. • Sie = you • Ihnen = you • Herr Schmidt, Sie sind nett. = Mr. Schmidt, you are nice. • Ich gebe Ihnen eine Schokolade. = I will give you a chocolate. • er = he • ihm = him • Das ist Michael. Er ist Architekt. = This is Michael. He is an architect. • Ich gebe ihm eine Schokolade = I will give him a chocolate. • sie = she • ihr = her • Das ist Michaela. Sie ist Studentin. = This is Michaela. She is a student. • Ich gebe ihr eine Schokolade = I will give her a chocolate. • es = it • ihm = him • Das ist ein Kind. Es ist süß. = This is a child. It is sweet. • Ich gebe ihm eine Schokolade. = I will give him a chocolate. • wir = we • uns = us • Wir sind Samantha und Mike. = We are Samantha and Mike. • Gibst du uns eine Schokolade? = Will you give us a chocolate? • ihr = you all • euch = you all • Marie und Tobi, ihr seid nett. = Marie and Tobi, you are nice. • Ich gebe euch eine Schokolade. = I want to give you a chocolate. • Sie = you all • Ihnen = you all • Herr und Frau Müller, Sie sind nett. = Mr. and Mrs. Müller, you are nice. • Ich gebe Ihnen eine Schokolade. = I will give you a chocolate. • sie = they • ihnen = them • Das sind Petra und Jürgen. Sie sind nett. = This is Petra and Jürgen. They are nice. • Ich gebe ihnen eine Schokolade. = I will give them a chocolate.
Hi, Thank you for your videos. amazing. Just a suggestion, At the Glance table may include a column for Akkusative too for better understanding and consolidation of Nominative, Akkusative and Dativ Personal Pronomen.
I didn't understand this sentence. Help me "Ich gebe ihm eine schokolade" How will it be " I will give him a chocolate" . It's present tense. isn't it ? "I give him a chocolate". Is this the meaning or the first one .
i don't understand the sequence of different parts of speechs in a sentence. what I mean is which one should come first dativ or akkusativ and apart from verb which comes at the second place what is the sequence for others?
Why you translate future as present? is this acceptable in German? "ich gebe" (I give) in Present Tense, "ich gab" (I gave) in Simple Past, and "ich werde geben" (I will give) in Future Tense.
Yes, in German, it’s quite common to use the present tense to express the future when the context makes the timing clear. So instead of saying "Ich werde morgen geben" (I will give tomorrow), Germans often say "Ich gebe morgen" to mean the same thing. This is perfectly natural and widely used in everyday German. However, "ich werde geben" is also correct and adds clarity if the future aspect needs to be emphasized.
Well, the dative always involves a preposition in the full sentence (I mean, when you don't replace it with a pronoun). It basically answers the question "to whom?" "For whom" (you can see the proposition to/for). Basically if in Engliah you can say "to me" "to you" "to him" "to her", etc. its tge dative. The akusative DOES NOT involve prepositions and you wouldn't be able to say "to me" "to you", etc. in English
Vielen dank für deine videos your videos are excellent but in this lesson i have a confusion How would we say "give me a glass of water "if we use mir or mich for me then whats the nominativ in this sentence
At 6:40, surely "Ich gebe ihm eine Schokolade" is NOT "I will give him a chocolate", but "I will give IT a chocolate". It is a child (Es ist ein Kind)... unspecified, or irrelevant, whether it was a girl or a boy! It (the child) would still be 'ihm' if the child was a girl. Careless and very confusing had I not have realised this. :-)
So if the child was a girl, we would say, "Ich gebe ihr eine Schokolade"? My 'confusion' is that if a child in German is neutral (es ist ein Kind), we still refer to its gender as in "I gave him/her a chocolate" as opposed to "I gave it a chocolate"? Danke.
Thanks for uploading the video. I have a doubt at 01:07 , Why are we saying *Er ist mein Freund* and not *Er ist **_meinen_** Freund* (as freund is masculine and an object)?
Hi there, Thanks for your Video. its excellent. clear explanations.God Bless you. My questions is, 1) How to REMEMBER while speaking, that this is a Dative object, akkusative object so lets do the conjugation let's use dem and not der.............in my language, I speak without thinking. how am I supposed to do this while learning german language?While writing I can erase at least. 2) Playlist for A1, 65 videos will that be enough to clear CEFR A1 Level? or what other videos do I need to learn specifically for A1 only? in another video, (grammar video), it is for both A1 and A2.
Apparently, according to this video, if you are nice, people will automatically give you chocolate.
Ahahaha the same thing when I was watching the video 🤣
😂😂😂😂
😂
🤣🤣🤣 hahaaa
Template
So many schokolade were given away today
Because of this channel i get good marks in german
Same here thankyou very much
Really, do u think this channel is sufficient for a1?
for revision yeah@@Thewayto_share
damn. i had this today. didnt understand anything until i got home and came directly here to understand and i surely NOW understand it.
Danke schön :)
She's awesome....
Sie sind sehr nett und ich gebe Ihnen viele Schokolade
Super
Jetzt bitte, oh dieser Kommentar wurde vor 6 Jahren abgegeben
The way you teach here is simply awesome! Thanks for your effort and its a great help. Keep up the good work!!
Thank you
You have done a great job maam.. you can't imagine how these videos are valuable to me!!!!!
You are really good teacher...Honestly saying , never saw anyone in detail like this. this is very understandable to new people.
Danke, dass du dieses Video gemacht hast! The link was actually sent to me by my *German teacher* ! That proves that even she finds this helpful! :)
Ich liebe deine Videos! Can U please make some exercises at the end with blanks for us In order to practice ? Danke !
Meine Liebling Lehrerin
Sie sind am besten für mich 😘😘😘😘
Danke schön lehrerin, tschuss auf wiedersehen
I have a 99 in German, and I'm not even a native speaker. Probably bcuz I'm Romanian and people from Romania learn languages really easily bcuz of the diverse background of the language. Either way, my teacher gives us videos on this channel and they match what he says pretty much exactly.
From nowonwards i am able to understand difference between nominative akkusativ and dativ.
Danke für die vedio...
Vielen Dank für ihre Hilfe.
You are the best teacher i ever had❤
Danke für deine helfen , Das Sind sehr nett videos ! ❤❤☺🇩🇪
All the videos are very helpful and also some topics are well illustrated by you.
Danke!
I like this lesson. Danke! 감사합니다!
Very well explained.super👌👌👌👌
Danke für das Video. Es ist sehr hilfreich für meine DeutschPrüfung.
Hyy
Lektion sechsunddreißig
Personalpronomen (Dativ) = personal pronouns (dative)
• ich = I
• mir = me
• Hi. Ich bin Maria. = Hi. I am Maria.
• Gibst du mir eine Schokolade? = Will you give me a chocolate?
• du = you
• dir = you
• Anna, du bist nett. = Anna, you are nice.
• Ich gebe dir eine Schokolade. = I will give you a chocolate.
• Sie = you
• Ihnen = you
• Herr Schmidt, Sie sind nett. = Mr. Schmidt, you are nice.
• Ich gebe Ihnen eine Schokolade. = I will give you a chocolate.
• er = he
• ihm = him
• Das ist Michael. Er ist Architekt. = This is Michael. He is an architect.
• Ich gebe ihm eine Schokolade = I will give him a chocolate.
• sie = she
• ihr = her
• Das ist Michaela. Sie ist Studentin. = This is Michaela. She is a student.
• Ich gebe ihr eine Schokolade = I will give her a chocolate.
• es = it
• ihm = him
• Das ist ein Kind. Es ist süß. = This is a child. It is sweet.
• Ich gebe ihm eine Schokolade. = I will give him a chocolate.
• wir = we
• uns = us
• Wir sind Samantha und Mike. = We are Samantha and Mike.
• Gibst du uns eine Schokolade? = Will you give us a chocolate?
• ihr = you all
• euch = you all
• Marie und Tobi, ihr seid nett. = Marie and Tobi, you are nice.
• Ich gebe euch eine Schokolade. = I want to give you a chocolate.
• Sie = you all
• Ihnen = you all
• Herr und Frau Müller, Sie sind nett. = Mr. and Mrs. Müller, you are nice.
• Ich gebe Ihnen eine Schokolade. = I will give you a chocolate.
• sie = they
• ihnen = them
• Das sind Petra und Jürgen. Sie sind nett. = This is Petra and Jürgen. They are nice.
• Ich gebe ihnen eine Schokolade. = I will give them a chocolate.
Danke !
who else is watching this from India and got Cadbury ad before the video? 😂
Sie sind sehr nett und Vielen Danke
this was challenging, i finally understand .. thanks Monika
UR THE BEST I HAD A COMPETITION of German u helped me so much thank you for everything!
Danke sehr Ihnen💐🌹🌺🌸🌹🍒
Hi, Thank you for your videos. amazing. Just a suggestion, At the Glance table may include a column for Akkusative too for better understanding and consolidation of Nominative, Akkusative and Dativ Personal Pronomen.
you can make it yourself for practice ;)
thanks a lot for putting your effort to make these videos, really vielen danke
Vielen Dank für deine video,ich mir gefallen,von deine video,ich habe viele gelernt
Danke und wiedersehen
Mein Hund ist Mops.
Er ist nett.
Ich gebe ihm eine Käsestange.
Danke schön!
Vielen danke! Deine lektions ist prima!
Vielen Dank für deine hilfe.
Danke schon ich finde Dativ Lektion so klar
Sie ist eine toll Lehrer
You make it so simple and easy to understand. Ich Danke dir sehr.
German student?
@@hrishi2807 Sorry for replying so late. UA-cam didn't notify me.
No, I am not a German student. (Just a hobby)
@ϥⲣⲁⲟⲛ Informal use.
Thank You Very Much ma'am!!
Es hat mein Deutsch sehr verbessert!!
Hyy
yay i got full marrks because of u
u earned a subscriber
Love this channel!! Makes understanding German so much easier.
Hallo Ich Bin Neu Danke Für Video Lehriren
Wenn du nett bist, gebe ich eine Schokolade 🍫🤣🤣🤣
Its really helpful! Dankeschön!
So easy and simple teaching
Frau Learn German ist nett. Ich gebe ihr eine schocolade. ^_^
Vielen Dank!
Lehrarin Danke !!
Danke schön
For this good episode
Always super😊
Danke das ist gut für mich
Great job
danke schön meine liebe schwester
Great video. You deserve eine Schokolade.
Sehr gut! Viela dank
Herzlichen Dank dafür
Danke, das ist ein gutes video
Thank you so much 😊 .
Can someone answer me please, why we use 'Mein Freund' instead of 'Meinem'?
ich wünsche gebe dir einen blume . danke lehrerin💗
Vielen danke ☺️
Danke 🙏🏻
Danke shön❤️
Thank you very much❤️
Merci beaucoup❤️
شكرا جزيلا❤️
Ich heisse Tushar. Du bist nett. Danke vor das video
*für das Video
Danke lehrerin
Well done!!!!! This is very useful!!!!!!
Very nice and well explained
N1
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!BINOD
I didn't understand this sentence. Help me
"Ich gebe ihm eine schokolade"
How will it be " I will give him a chocolate"
.
It's present tense. isn't it ?
"I give him a chocolate".
Is this the meaning or the first one
.
R u a mallu😁
Sehr gud. Danke
Danke schön sie auch aufwiedersehen
Vielen dank
Danke Danke vielmals Du bist Lehrerin in sehr nette
Vielen Dank!01.06.23
Thank you very much
Thank you super video
U teach superb
You’re the best teacher
Danke schön
expained very nicely!
i don't understand the sequence of different parts of speechs in a sentence. what I mean is which one should come first dativ or akkusativ and apart from verb which comes at the second place what is the sequence for others?
Okay. We shall make a video on that soon. But right now, just learn it this way.
vielen dank
Why you translate future as present? is this acceptable in German?
"ich gebe" (I give) in Present Tense, "ich gab" (I gave) in Simple Past, and "ich werde geben" (I will give) in Future Tense.
Yes, in German, it’s quite common to use the present tense to express the future when the context makes the timing clear. So instead of saying "Ich werde morgen geben" (I will give tomorrow), Germans often say "Ich gebe morgen" to mean the same thing. This is perfectly natural and widely used in everyday German.
However, "ich werde geben" is also correct and adds clarity if the future aspect needs to be emphasized.
Danke Schön! you explained it very well :D
great video, left a like !! Xx
Exelent video
I'm having one major confusion, why can't I use dich instead of dir?
How would I know when I should use dativ or akkusativ?
Well, the dative always involves a preposition in the full sentence (I mean, when you don't replace it with a pronoun). It basically answers the question "to whom?" "For whom" (you can see the proposition to/for). Basically if in Engliah you can say "to me" "to you" "to him" "to her", etc. its tge dative.
The akusative DOES NOT involve prepositions and you wouldn't be able to say "to me" "to you", etc. in English
Vielen Dank für ihre Hilfe 😊
Well, Can you please make a video in where should I use mich or mir, dich or dir?
Good!
Thx for video
Danke
At moment 8:17 there is a mistake in translation. I guess it should have been "I will give you a chocolate."
Vielen dank für deine videos your videos are excellent but in this lesson i have a confusion
How would we say "give me a glass of water "if we use mir or mich for me then whats the nominativ in this sentence
Vielen Dank für deine helfen
Good lesson
Vielen Dank
I'm getting confused now in dative and please you give full list at the end please write also English meaning
At 6:40, surely "Ich gebe ihm eine Schokolade" is NOT "I will give him a chocolate", but "I will give IT a chocolate". It is a child (Es ist ein Kind)... unspecified, or irrelevant, whether it was a girl or a boy! It (the child) would still be 'ihm' if the child was a girl. Careless and very confusing had I not have realised this. :-)
Hi Johnny. Logical for english native speakers to think like that and get confused. ihm = him.
So if the child was a girl, we would say, "Ich gebe ihr eine Schokolade"? My 'confusion' is that if a child in German is neutral (es ist ein Kind), we still refer to its gender as in "I gave him/her a chocolate" as opposed to "I gave it a chocolate"? Danke.
Thanks for uploading the video. I have a doubt at 01:07 , Why are we saying *Er ist mein Freund* and not *Er ist **_meinen_** Freund* (as freund is masculine and an object)?
The verb sein is always Nominativ
Hi there, Thanks for your Video. its excellent. clear explanations.God Bless you.
My questions is,
1) How to REMEMBER while speaking, that this is a Dative object, akkusative object so lets do the conjugation let's use dem and not der.............in my language, I speak without thinking.
how am I supposed to do this while learning german language?While writing I can erase at least.
2) Playlist for A1, 65 videos will that be enough to clear CEFR A1 Level? or what other videos do I need to learn specifically for A1 only?
in another video, (grammar video), it is for both A1 and A2.
This channel has so many magic lol
Hallo monika,wie gehts? Really monika I am too much confused in "sie" I.e when to use capital 's' and when to use smaller one😣😣😣
capital Sie should be used in formal cases and small sie as she
Sie mean you mean in Hindi "AAP" and small sie mean she mean in Hindi "wah"
Merci! tres gentil(e)