This teacher deserves more subscribers…I saw his video only today. Wow..One of the best videos…He explains that can be easily understood…German is difficult but he made it easier to learn..Plus, the voice quality is superb.
Danke teacher! I just started learning German, and learning in English which is my second language, I'm from Brazil (Portuguese), your lessons are perfect!
You are thee most underrated german teacher i have come across in UA-cam your videos are short and explanatory you get all what you need in just one video and your voice is very clear and calming also please addd more videos i have remarked that you don't put too much please add more
I have been learning German for 4 years and I have a writing exam coming up soon so I wanted to make sure I have the basics down. I really appreciate your channel; your videos are really nice and concise. 🙏
Its the same in Swedish if you are adding an adverb or something at the beginning you still leave the verb in pos2 I never realised thats not the case in english until now
I'm learning GCSE German and from watching these videos I think anyone could actually learn German to an advanced level by remembering these videos and learning words.
Hi! Ich habe eine Frage. Well i am having this trouble about the words and sentence orders, i cant figure them out! I get very mixed up. As i was saying about the words. When the word is "essen", sometimes they use the word as "esse". I dont understand how to use the right words in each sentence. I really hope you understood what i ment! Please reply back if you could try helping me out, thanks! :) By the way, your super underatted, your videos are amazing! Thank you for your help, vielen dank! 😊😁
What about: Normalerweise sehe ich die Berge. Because thats usually how I speak and correct me if I am wrong, I usually speak using plusquamperfekt word order.
hello thanks for the video. if i heard 'hast du' in a sentence ie 'gestern hast du einen saft getrunken' id automatically assume it was a question. is there a way of understanding that it isnt a question, or is it just context and inflection ie the way you modulate your voice tone in a question? same if i heard it with the modal verbs too ie 'normalwiese, kannst du die berge sehen'. in fact if you put this sentence into google translate, the only difference to the outcome is if you put a question mark at the end :)
Hi, it's only a question if the sentence starts with the verb. In both your examples the verb is in the second position, thus a statement. If they started with the verb ("Hast du gestern... ?" and "Kannst du normalerweise... ?) then they'd be questions. And please note that there is no comma between 'normalerweise' and 'kannst'.
@@p.b.4949 You could say a statement in a questioning tone, but that is distinct from a proper question, same as in English (I think). Compare "Warst du im Urlaub?" - "Did you go on vacation?" to "Du warst im Urlaub?" - "You went on vacation?" In the first example, you're "actually" asking if they were on vacation, in the second, you (believe to) know they did and are putting the statement into doubt, either rhetorically, to start up a conversation, or to actually make sure. That's what I understand the difference to be, anyway
the last sentence is ich rufe dich an denn ich mochte mit dir sprechen.... this doesnt make sense to me because ist sprechen the verb ??? if anyone knows please let me know
You have 2 verbs in the second part of the sentence, möchte and sprechen. When you use modal verbs (möchte, kann, will, soll, muss etc.) then the second verb goes to the end of the sentence, e.g. Ich will in Berlin wohnen (I want to live in Berlin).
Nice explanation, but obviously wrong. "Gestern hast Du einen Orangensaft getrunken" sounds funny. This word order is used ONLY if the emphasis lies on "Gestern": "Gestern, aber sicher nicht heute, ..." - yesterday but for sure not today "... hast Du einen Orangensaft getrunken." The commonly used word order is: "Du hast gestern einen Orangensaft getrunken." - Nothing else.
You are the most underrated teacher I know on UA-cam. Thank you for sharing your knowledge I am very grateful.from the uk
You're most welcome!
@@Germanonlinegym From Denmark, you're going to carry me through my exam! Much adoration GOG
You nailed all german teachers, you were born to teach
Thank you, german grammar is not hard, the hard thing is getting used to it. Takes time and practice
This teacher deserves more subscribers…I saw his video only today. Wow..One of the best videos…He explains that can be easily understood…German is difficult but he made it easier to learn..Plus, the voice quality is superb.
i wish he taught every language omg
Bravo, the clearest most concise explanation of the zero-th position. Five years on, for me. Immer lernen, danke.
Danke teacher! I just started learning German, and learning in English which is my second language, I'm from Brazil (Portuguese), your lessons are perfect!
i always like how you present your lessons - short, concise and easily understandable!
lets go recent german gang
You are thee most underrated german teacher i have come across in UA-cam your videos are short and explanatory you get all what you need in just one video and your voice is very clear and calming also please addd more videos i have remarked that you don't put too much please add more
I have been learning German for 4 years and I have a writing exam coming up soon so I wanted to make sure I have the basics down. I really appreciate your channel; your videos are really nice and concise. 🙏
this really helped me, danke!
You're very welcome!
Too little likes on this channel. I've just watched 2 videos about German syntax and they're the best on UA-cam!
Vielen Dank für die Erklärung.
You're every German learner's hero. Thank you for this!
Thank U sir very much .U are great know one can teach like this easily.
I am going to tell my all friends to watch this channel..
underrated germany teacher
I really was looking hard for videos like that, that's so helpful thxxx
As a native speaker, I never noticed that German grammar could be so complicated until I watched this today...
🙄
Thank You for this video on German language word order!
Its the same in Swedish if you are adding an adverb or something at the beginning you still leave the verb in pos2 I never realised thats not the case in english until now
Very clear! So much better than my teacher. Thank you!
Wow awesome videos mein freund. Danke.
I'm glad you like it!
So helpful, thank you!!
Terrific, you are! LOL! But seriously....your method of teaching is effective and outstanding!!!
Thank you so much for this!
Your knowledge is outstanding.please make more videos so we can learn german perfectly
I'm learning GCSE German and from watching these videos I think anyone could actually learn German to an advanced level by remembering these videos and learning words.
thank you very much!!!
Well,explained
Hi! Ich habe eine Frage. Well i am having this trouble about the words and sentence orders, i cant figure them out! I get very mixed up. As i was saying about the words.
When the word is "essen", sometimes they use the word as "esse". I dont understand how to use the right words in each sentence.
I really hope you understood what i ment! Please reply back if you could try helping me out, thanks! :)
By the way, your super underatted, your videos are amazing! Thank you for your help, vielen dank! 😊😁
You probably know now but I think it's
ich esse.
du isst.
Sie essen.
@@ItssMitch yes i now know! It goes like this..
Singular:
Ich: esse
Du: isst
Er, sie, es: isst
Plural:
Wir: essen
Ihr: esst
sie/Sie: essen
:))
new to the German language (aside from freshman year in high school).
yes/ no questions, place the verb in the first position, right?
Yes that's correct
I really needed that, thank you so so much!!!!
What about: Normalerweise sehe ich die Berge. Because thats usually how I speak and correct me if I am wrong, I usually speak using plusquamperfekt word order.
That sentence is correct, the verb is in the 2nd position. It's present tense though, not Plusquamperfekt
Great!
Ich studiere seit 2 Wochen Deutsch. Ich denke, dass die deutsche Sprache eine sehr schöne Sprache ist.
das hilft sehr! danke!
Amazing. ❤ Danke Schon.
hello thanks for the video. if i heard 'hast du' in a sentence ie 'gestern hast du einen saft getrunken' id automatically assume it was a question. is there a way of understanding that it isnt a question, or is it just context and inflection ie the way you modulate your voice tone in a question? same if i heard it with the modal verbs too ie 'normalwiese, kannst du die berge sehen'. in fact if you put this sentence into google translate, the only difference to the outcome is if you put a question mark at the end :)
Hi, it's only a question if the sentence starts with the verb. In both your examples the verb is in the second position, thus a statement. If they started with the verb ("Hast du gestern... ?" and "Kannst du normalerweise... ?) then they'd be questions. And please note that there is no comma between 'normalerweise' and 'kannst'.
@@Germanonlinegym thanks for the reply and explanation! appreciate it
@@p.b.4949 You could say a statement in a questioning tone, but that is distinct from a proper question, same as in English (I think).
Compare "Warst du im Urlaub?" - "Did you go on vacation?" to "Du warst im Urlaub?" - "You went on vacation?"
In the first example, you're "actually" asking if they were on vacation, in the second, you (believe to) know they did and are putting the statement into doubt, either rhetorically, to start up a conversation, or to actually make sure. That's what I understand the difference to be, anyway
Thank you
vielen dank, Aus Australien.
Great explanations
Hier ist Winter, heute gibt es keinen Sonnenschein, mein Herr
Thanks xx
subscribed!
the last sentence is ich rufe dich an denn ich mochte mit dir sprechen.... this doesnt make sense to me because ist sprechen the verb ??? if anyone knows please let me know
You have 2 verbs in the second part of the sentence, möchte and sprechen. When you use modal verbs (möchte, kann, will, soll, muss etc.) then the second verb goes to the end of the sentence, e.g. Ich will in Berlin wohnen (I want to live in Berlin).
ありがとうございます😁
Vielan danke .... ♥️♥️♥️
This is exactly the same in Dutch
Can you please teach daily speaking Deutsche
Zuerst spielst du Tennis, dann spielst du Basketball.
dass, weil, als: das Verb an dem Ende.
Heute gehen ich nach Berlin.(is this right?)
'Heute gehe ich nach Berlin' is correct but means that you walk to Berlin (on foot)
'Heute gehe ich nach Berlin' is correct. but means that you walk to Berlin (on foot)
It is gehe because ich means there will be an e on the end
Ich mag Geschichte, deshalb lese ich ein Buch.
Ich bin im Arsch in dem Krippe
(Ich habe der Unterricht geliebt
Nice explanation, but obviously wrong.
"Gestern hast Du einen Orangensaft getrunken" sounds funny. This word order is used ONLY if the emphasis lies on "Gestern":
"Gestern, aber sicher nicht heute, ..." - yesterday but for sure not today "... hast Du einen Orangensaft getrunken."
The commonly used word order is: "Du hast gestern einen Orangensaft getrunken." - Nothing else.
This is a clickbait title! It's a common mistake, I knew this from GCSE, when I was 16.
❤❤❤
Danke feel mals. I can say just dont know how to spell it.
vielmals :)
Es regnet, trotzdem geht sie spazieren.
Gestern,habe ich Berlin gefahren(Richtig satz?)
Gestern bin ich nach Berlin gefahren
'fahren' requires past tense with 'sein'
Gestern fuhr ich nach Berlin
Super!