OK. Finished Basics 2 but I need to revise the various forms of "sein" (to be) and "haben" (have).
Hopefully any Germans I meet only want to talk about people drinking milk, eating bread and reading newspapers, because that's about the limit of my knowledge so far.
Took four years of german in high school and was pretty good at it but after 25 + years all I can still remember are some greetings, simple phrases and many not so nice cuss words. [:D]
RebelYell
"Those who don't know history are destined to repeat it."
“All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”
Edmund Burke
Super! ein grosses Unterfangen aber es lohnt sich auf jeden fall. Die deutsche Sprache finde ich sehr schoen! vor Jahren setzte ich mich zum Ziel Deutsch zu lernen - i had been working slowly with the Teach Yourself books, but once i then bought the books Modern German Grammar and its work book and also the Practical Dictionary of German Usage books, things really came together. When i bought latter it was around 80.00 in 2006 unfortunately its now quite expensive http://www.amazon.com/A-Practical-Dicti ... 0198240023
Fortunately there are so many great resources now! A really big help is to also start acquiring some books in german on things that really interest you.
I love also die Grammatik der Deutschen Sprache, its rules end up actually making alot more sense and are more consistent than english. It may seem back to front at the start but its all in where the emphasis lies. Harrons 1001 pitfalls in German and 1001 idioms books were also superb.
Have a good dictionary with you everywhere you go - perhaps there is a good one for mobiles or tablets now
Stick with the duolingo of course - i will be interested to see how you find it! I always wanted some really comprehensive german language program for computer but never found one - that was 7 years ago though.
Nice. I advice you to go read a few books in German, in my opinion one of the better ways to learn that language. Nothing like reading a biography about Rommel written in German.
Ofcourse the bestest way to learn Deutsch is to find a schönes Fräulein and then practice some german with her.
indeed! and its spelling of words and the pronunciation just follow no set rules at all. I like how sentences with multiple verbs in german work - in simple sentences, not the compound ones and complex ones, you get the first verb in the second position and then the 2nd in the last position and all the others fall in backwards from the end , not that a simple sentence should have too many verbs but for an english speaker it makes every sentence like building a monument as Mark Twain described it and i must agree - the package that the syntax creates makes the sentence so much like a finished work.
But there is so much i love about German -its rhyming and ability for the speaker to just create new words that make perfect sense. I find it also a language steeped in philosophical, metaphysical and mythological concepts - the German Geist - this romantic wanderer and artist (by romantic i am referring to the period and not the current monochrome western marketed concept of romance) The poetry of Hoelderlin, Goethe, Rilke - all so exquisitely melancholic, mythological and imaginative. I could go on and on but i shouldn't as this is just me expressing what i love about this particular language.
But of course as English is my mother tongue, German is always so exciting and mysterious for me with all the nuances of its language. English has much that is great also - the writings of William Blake are as beautiful, intense and otherworldly
I always wanted to learn another language. German would be cool, but being in south FL USA, spanish is practical for me.
The page is brilliant. I've finished basics 1 and 2. I prolly have about a 1 year old's grasp of the language so far [8D] I don't want to brag or anything, but I'm proficient at saying "i read the newspaper' or 'she eats bread', so on [8D]
I took 3 years of German in high school. I assumed I'd never use it, but thought it would be interesting.
A couple of years later, I was in the Navy and my ship pulled into Bremen, Germany for a few days. I really enjoyed the few days we were in Germany. I was very impressed with how clean and well maintained everything was, particularly Bremen.
Anyway, some shipmates and I decided to take a train to a rock concert in Hamburg. We got into a cab. I was the only one that even had a clue as to how to converse in German. I told the cab driver, in my awful German to take us to the train station. I called it a "Zugplatz", which I believe literally is "train platform". The cab driver looked at me with a puzzled look on his face and kind of hand signaled to wait. He'd be right back. He got out of the cab and ran to another cab sitting in front of ours and returned. He said, "Oh, you want to go to the train station." Turns out he was a Brit working in Bremen as a taxi driver. I guess he only understood good German and not awful German. He told me the correct term for train station was "Bahnhof". I'm guessing, since Bremen was in the British sector back then, he was a British serviceman moonlighting.
While taking German in school, I had a particular phrase that I had a lot of trouble memorizing. It was "Vorsicht! Stossen sie sich nicht dein Kopf mit der Lampe." Which means "Watch out! Don't bump your head on the lamp." It's about the only thing I remember, now. I always thought that that was dumb. When would anyone ever use that? Well, one night in Bremen we went into a bar and ended up sitting at a table drinking beer with a bunch of German high school students. They spoke English very well. I believe they told us English was required in school. The beer pitchers were actually in the shape of large glass boots. And, guess what, the tables all had lamps over them hanging down from the ceiling. One of the students was getting up and talking with his head was coming very close to one of the lamps. I said, "Vorsicht! Stossen sie sich nicht dein Kopf mit der Lampe". He looked at me astonished and said, "You speak very good German." [:D]
Anyway, just a couple of experiences with German that I thought was interesting and a little comical.
I took 3 years of German in high school. I assumed I'd never use it, but thought it would be interesting.
A couple of years later, I was in the Navy and my ship pulled into Bremen, Germany for a few days. I really enjoyed the few days we were in Germany. I was very impressed with how clean and well maintained everything was, particularly Bremen.
Anyway, some shipmates and I decided to take a train to a rock concert in Hamburg. We got into a cab. I was the only one that even had a clue as to how to converse in German. I told the cab driver, in my awful German to take us to the train station. I called it a "Zugplatz", which I believe literally is "train platform". The cab driver looked at me with a puzzled look on his face and kind of hand signaled to wait. He'd be right back. He got out of the cab and ran to another cab sitting in front of ours and returned. He said, "Oh, you want to go to the train station." Turns out he was a Brit working in Bremen as a taxi driver. I guess he only understood good German and not awful German. He told me the correct term for train station was "Bahnhof". I'm guessing, since Bremen was in the British sector back then, he was a British serviceman moonlighting.
Anyway, just a couple of experiences with German that I thought was interesting and a little comical.
Now that made me laugh......[:D][&o]
"Before Guadalcanal the enemy advanced at his pleasure. After Guadalcanal, he retreated at ours".
indeed! and its spelling of words and the pronunciation just follow no set rules at all. I like how sentences with multiple verbs in german work - in simple sentences, not the compound ones and complex ones, you get the first verb in the second position and then the 2nd in the last position and all the others fall in backwards from the end , not that a simple sentence should have too many verbs but for an english speaker it makes every sentence like building a monument as Mark Twain described it and i must agree - the package that the syntax creates makes the sentence so much like a finished work.
But there is so much i love about German -its rhyming and ability for the speaker to just create new words that make perfect sense. I find it also a language steeped in philosophical, metaphysical and mythological concepts - the German Geist - this romantic wanderer and artist (by romantic i am referring to the period and not the current monochrome western marketed concept of romance) The poetry of Hoelderlin, Goethe, Rilke - all so exquisitely melancholic, mythological and imaginative. I could go on and on but i shouldn't as this is just me expressing what i love about this particular language.
But of course as English is my mother tongue, German is always so exciting and mysterious for me with all the nuances of its language. English has much that is great also - the writings of William Blake are as beautiful, intense and otherworldly
That was very well stated Agathosdaimon. German is a gorgeous language.
"I hate newspapermen. They come into camp and pick up their camp rumors and print them as facts. I regard them as spies, which, in truth, they are. If I killed them all there would be news from Hell before breakfast."- W.T. Sherman
When I went to Germany four years ago I remember at the hotel the german lady asking me what part of the Midwest I was from. I had two years of german in college. All I said was Guten Tag!. It was funny because I thought I spoke "normal". Didn't realize I had an accent!!!
"I thank God that I was warring on the gridirons of the midwest and not the battlefields of Europe"
Nile Kinnick 1918-1943