I am sooooo glad she mentioned that FÜR is accusative because I would have thought “einEN.” I now understand that it is “ein” and not “einen” because it basically means “what a day.” Ich danke Ihnen für dieses hilfreiche Video!
That was really helpful, thank both of you :) I'm about to reach B1, and there were some texts in which "Was für" was present, and I finally comprehended, yei
Great video. Is it possible to use the exclamation function with akkusative or other cases? Z.B.: Was für einen schönen Hund du hast! Was für einem Verein du gehörst zu! Are these correct or am I totally wrong? Thank you
Hi there I have a question here. I saw some sentences like ; _Sie will nach Deutschland reisen.Deshalb lernt sie Deutsch._ _Ich muss lernen, deshalb komme ich nicht zum Training._ Here for example, *deshalb* is used is like a conjunction in the second.But it's used like a adverb in the 1st sentence? Could you explain me little bit here if it is adverb are conjunction? I really appreciate your answer.
Hallo! Thank you for your question and you are absolutely right, deshalb is used like an adverb and like a conjunction. In German it belongs to a group of words called "Konjunktionaladverbien - conjunctional adverbs" which means it is used to connect two main sentences. The adverb is always placed at the start of the second sentence and followed by a verb in the second position. As you highlighted in your two examples, the two main sentences can be either separated by a comma or a full stop, both options are correct. Other examples belonging to this group are deswegen and darum. I hope this answers your question 😁
@@coffeebreaklanguages Oh Danke. _wenn_ ist auch Konjunktionaladverbien ? *Wenn ich müde bin, schlafe ich.* *Ich schlafe ,wenn ich müde bin* Freue mich auf deine Antwort
Vielen dank, Mark und Andrea! Was für ein schönes Video heute. Wie immer, sehr klar und verständlich.
This is gold, you deserve more views! Thanks for such a good explanation.
Glad it was helpful!
Sie sind am besten 🙏🏻😘
I am sooooo glad she mentioned that FÜR is accusative because I would have thought “einEN.” I now understand that it is “ein” and not “einen” because it basically means “what a day.” Ich danke Ihnen für dieses hilfreiche Video!
Danke, dass Sie meine Frage so klar und gut beantwortet haben - ich weiß das wirklich zu schätzen!
Was für ein Tag! Ich liebe es, neue Dinge zu lernen!
Been learning so much German with these videos. Vielen Dank!
Great to hear you're enjoying our videos Thea!
great topic you guys covered, danke!
Danke. Ich habe A2 Prüfung nächsten Monat.
Dein Video is sehr richtig für mich.
Ich komme aus Indien.
Ich brauche more genug Video.
Thanks for this! Incredible scottish/german accents floating around this video
Oh my god wow! So clear!!!!! Totally understandable and einfach
Was für eine gute Erklärung! Dankeschön! :)
That was really helpful, thank both of you :) I'm about to reach B1, and there were some texts in which "Was für" was present, and I finally comprehended, yei
We're so glad you found it useful! 😊
Very interesting, wish more people like your channel
First time, but i think this is good for me. Tausend Dank :)
The best explanation. Thanks
We're so glad to hear that you found it useful! 😊
I really liked it. Thank you✨ Could you please make more C1 level videos and put them in a C1 level playlist?
Was für eine einfache Erklärung 😌💙!
Was für ein Video! Ich habe wirklich verstanden.
Very helpful! Vielen dank.
was für eine tolle Lektion! vielen Dank!
danke!
Sehr gut, danke!
Great video. Is it possible to use the exclamation function with akkusative or other cases? Z.B.:
Was für einen schönen Hund du hast!
Was für einem Verein du gehörst zu!
Are these correct or am I totally wrong?
Thank you
Interessant 👍
Benutzen wir immer Akkusative mit was fur fragen?
Ich muss sagen, dass Andreas Lächeln wirklich ansteckend ist
😂. Was für ein interessantes Thema
Hi there I have a question here.
I saw some sentences like ;
_Sie will nach Deutschland reisen.Deshalb lernt sie Deutsch._
_Ich muss lernen, deshalb komme ich nicht zum Training._
Here for example, *deshalb* is used is like a conjunction in the second.But it's used like a adverb in the 1st sentence? Could you explain me little bit here if it is adverb are conjunction?
I really appreciate your answer.
Hallo! Thank you for your question and you are absolutely right, deshalb is used like an adverb and like a conjunction. In German it belongs to a group of words called "Konjunktionaladverbien - conjunctional adverbs" which means it is used to connect two main sentences. The adverb is always placed at the start of the second sentence and followed by a verb in the second position. As you highlighted in your two examples, the two main sentences can be either separated by a comma or a full stop, both options are correct. Other examples belonging to this group are deswegen and darum. I hope this answers your question 😁
@@coffeebreaklanguages Oh Danke. _wenn_ ist auch Konjunktionaladverbien ?
*Wenn ich müde bin, schlafe ich.*
*Ich schlafe ,wenn ich müde bin*
Freue mich auf deine Antwort
How comes einer* Stift?
How is "ein Tag" a subject in "Was für ein Tag das war."? I did not get it. Ich kapiere das nicht. Danke.
Hallo! In "Was für ein Tag das war", we have only one noun. It corresponds to the verb "war". So, we can deduce from this that it is the subject.
🙏🙏
👍👍🙏