Originally posted by VectraMan
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Reply to: Du aber Sie?
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Previously on "Du aber Sie?"
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The best one to use is 'Imbiß' or 'Bude' Deutsch. As even Germans have problems then just use the 'd' or 'n' as in: "gib mir noch n'Bier" or "Ich möchte d'Pommes mit d'Soße." Some here: Imbiss-Deutsch
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Does she have the right to work in Germany?Originally posted by scooterscot View PostThat's awful.
She's a lovely woman from the Ukraine, no shelf is too high for dusting, couch pulled for the vacuum. Until recently I employed someone from England, attention to detail was absent and he would disappear with the money the moment my back was turned only working a couple of hours when three were paid. Lazy so in so.
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What amazes me is that a) something so unbelievably complicated evolved among primitive uneducated people, and b) in the couple of thousand years since nobody thought it would be nice to simplify it. In English we dropped all the cases (apart from with pronouns), drastically simplified our conjugations, got rid of the nonsense of assigning arbitrary genders to inanimate objects, AND adopted one form of you, and somehow we all manage to communicate fine.
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I've worked at places where it was more like:Originally posted by Sysman View PostBut where the case of the noun is clear, you can alter the order in English too.
- The system was down, so we went to the pub
- The system was down, so to the pub we went
- The system was down, so to the pub went we
We were at the pub so the system went down
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Das ist vielleicht richtig, jede art ton as far as I'm concerned.Originally posted by stek View PostIsn't 'Das' just nominative neuter? And not inflected so you'd hear it more?
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But where the case of the noun is clear, you can alter the order in English too.Originally posted by VectraMan View PostAnd I know all about the horrors of Den Mann beißt der Hund (which means the dog bites the man, and not the man bites the dog as any reasonable person used to speaking any reasonable language would assume). How about Die Frau beißt die Katze?
- The system was down, so we went to the pub
- The system was down, so to the pub we went
- The system was down, so to the pub went we
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But das in more or less be the most frequently used in day to day conversation. Even many young Germans don't get it.Originally posted by stek View PostThis example is nothing to do with Du/Sie though, they are both nominative pronouns, 'Den' is (and my German is pants but I can recognise it as 'Der' inflected) - so I would guess 'Den' in this example is masculine accusative case. As we all know, in German articles inflect as well as nouns. Not sure about adjectives tho...
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