I know this video is one year old but I still got a question, Is there a situation where something else has a priority to go to the end of the sentence? like "[...] [verb] [...] [prefix] [ something else]" I mean, I bet there are such circumstances but what are they? or maybe it's never the case i don't know
Sort of. You can add another clause to the end after the prefix, but the prefix will be the last word of that clause. For example: Er lädt deine Mutter ein, weil er sie mag. - He invited your mother, because he likes her. Er lädt deine Mutter ein um dich zu ärgern. - He invited your mother in order to annoy you.
-- "Wir müssen zusammenarbeiten, deswegen arbeiten wir zusammen." ++ Aber ... zusammen|arbeiten ist trennbar, oder? -- Wir stellen keine Frage darüber. ++ Einverstanden. :(
I have a tendency to do that while speaking English, but I try to make a conscious effort to slow down in German. My newer videos are definitely better in that regard. If it helps, UA-cam allows you to slow the video down in the settings to 0.75 or 0.5 speed with little or no loss in the audio quality. Try that.
My accent is American. I am an American. The vocabulary I use is American English. If I put a British flag someone would complain when I say pants instead of trousers or the fact that I use coffee in all of my examples and almost never mention tea. 🇺🇸🇬🇧🇦🇺🇮🇳🇨🇦 🇩🇪🇦🇹🇨🇭🇱🇮
Honestly..I lost track and got confused. Would have been great if this was explained visually than just talking. Nothing is helpful😭😭😭
You re my favorite teacher
Muy buen video.
Great video, thank you for putting so much effort.
Great lesson but I am unbale to find the exercises pdf.
I know this video is one year old but I still got a question,
Is there a situation where something else has a priority to go to the end of the sentence? like "[...] [verb] [...] [prefix] [ something else]"
I mean, I bet there are such circumstances but what are they? or maybe it's never the case i don't know
Sort of. You can add another clause to the end after the prefix, but the prefix will be the last word of that clause.
For example: Er lädt deine Mutter ein, weil er sie mag. - He invited your mother, because he likes her.
Er lädt deine Mutter ein um dich zu ärgern. - He invited your mother in order to annoy you.
@@MrLAntrim interesting, thank you very much
These are so similar to phrasal verbs in English!
-- "Wir müssen zusammenarbeiten, deswegen arbeiten wir zusammen."
++ Aber ... zusammen|arbeiten ist trennbar, oder?
-- Wir stellen keine Frage darüber.
++ Einverstanden. :(
you are too fast to comprehend.
I have a tendency to do that while speaking English, but I try to make a conscious effort to slow down in German. My newer videos are definitely better in that regard. If it helps, UA-cam allows you to slow the video down in the settings to 0.75 or 0.5 speed with little or no loss in the audio quality. Try that.
Why the American flag, there is no American language?
My accent is American. I am an American. The vocabulary I use is American English. If I put a British flag someone would complain when I say pants instead of trousers or the fact that I use coffee in all of my examples and almost never mention tea.
🇺🇸🇬🇧🇦🇺🇮🇳🇨🇦
🇩🇪🇦🇹🇨🇭🇱🇮