Thank you Herr Antrim I have my B1 exam tomorrow and I've been binge watching all your videos for the last week. Thank you for all your free content. You are a really great teacher who deserves everything.
The genetive is vital to the German language, but not as vital as the other cases. You cannot substitute the genitive case with the dative all the time. So please stop spreading the false rumor that the genetive is never used, because it is. The fact that something is rarely used is not an indication that you don't need to use it.
This video has basically revised what I learned in recent years .
Really helpfull...and great efforts......
I only enjoy your lessons every time
Thank you Herr Antrim I have my B1 exam tomorrow and I've been binge watching all your videos for the last week. Thank you for all your free content. You are a really great teacher who deserves everything.
Thank you. That is very kind of you. Good luck on your exam.
Wow.. awesome thank you very much sir
Thanks for information but iam waiting for b1 please kindly share b1 course with us
Great great stuff yet again
Servus Herr Atrim.
At 1:25:17 you explained that ihr is an informal plural 'you', like multiple 'du's. How do you say a formal plural you? just simply use the Sie?
Yes. Sie can be singular or plural.
Vielen Dank 🙏
Danke🙏🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️
lol that Foreigner part was awesome!
So thanks
Most awaited video.
Danke schön.
Sehr gut
You have no idea how am struggling until now 😢😮😊🤔😏😏😏🥴
@@henkelruth7998 same here. 🥺
yes
Batavia, den 18den. April 1667 (casus dativus)
🙂👍🏻
forget genetive it almost never used in spoken german
@@andiamoci22 though genitive is the easy one for English speakers. It is the closest thing that English has for "cases"
The genetive is vital to the German language, but not as vital as the other cases. You cannot substitute the genitive case with the dative all the time. So please stop spreading the false rumor that the genetive is never used, because it is. The fact that something is rarely used is not an indication that you don't need to use it.
@@fremejoker Uhh they said „almost never“ not „never“. Please stop spreading false rumors, thank you!
Ich habe so viel vom Video gelernet