What are some common German phrases?
Basic German Phrases
- Guten Tag = Good morning.
- Hallo = Hello.
- Ich heiße … = My name is …
- Sprechen Sie Englisch? = Do you speak English?
- Wie heißt du? = What’s your name?
- Wie geht es dir? = How are you?
- Gut, danke = Fine, thank you.
- Nett, Sie kennen zu lernen = Nice to meet you.
What is the most common German phrase?
10 common German phrases: the basics
- Hallo (Hello)
- Tschüss (Bye)
- Bitte (Please)
- Danke (Thanks)
- Entschuldigung (Excuse me)
- Sorry (Sorry)
- Formal: Können Sie mir helfen?; informal: Kannst du mir helfen? (Can you help me?)
- Formal: Sprechen Sie English?; informal: In Sprichst du Englisch? (Do you speak English?)
How many words does a native German speaker use?
The complete common vocab of a native German with a decent college degree, that encompasses almost all words he would ever use in every day’s life including reading at ease classic literature and some of the well-worded media outlets might be around 1200 – 1500 words.
What are the 10 most common mistakes from non-native English speakers?
10 common mistakes from non-native English speakers that we should learn to appreciate. 1 1. “I didn’t eat nothing” and other double negatives. For example: Camilo: Does anybody know where my Toddy biscuits are? Frank: I didn’t eat 2 2. “I have 27 years”. 3 3. “Touristic”. 4 4. “Thanks, God!”. 5 5. “Hope it helps!”.
Why do non-native English speakers say 27 years instead of 27?
Some non-native English speakers, particularly those from a French, Italian or Spanish background — languages that don’t rely on only one verb to express everything — have begun to say they ‘have’ X years, as opposed to they ‘are’ X. “I have 27 years” clearly makes more sense than “I am 27.” You are not 27.
What is the best way to learn German without speaking?
There is simply no substitute for speaking. Not spending your whole day studying German vocabulary. Nor any amount of hours watching German YouTube videos and listening to podcasts. Not even reading books or e-books.
Why do English speakers use double negatives?
KW: Can’t tell me nothing! Double negatives are supposed to be a no-no (lol) in English, apparently as a result of the transposition of mathematical principles into language, so that if -1 x -1 = 1, then “not” x “no” = yes. Firstly, basically all English speakers use double negatives.