Jenny ist die einzigste Lehrerin, die den Superlativ zu meiner vollsten Zufriedenheit erklären kann. Sie gestaltet die Videos auf optimalste Art lebendiger als andere und in keinster Weise langweilig. Das waren hoffentlich genug Hyperlative. :)
I have a question.. When you started to use superlative with noun and article.. Why did sometime had the Adjective a form like normal basic Adjective (grössste, kälteste, teuerste) and in another case it was in superlativ (meinsten,bekantesten) How can you know what to you and how to say it?? Thanks for answer.. In love with your videos right now! Thanks
Soy fiel seguidor de este canal y hasta hoy acabo de descubrir que tenias un canal en el que enseñas aleman en español, estoy sorprendido! tu español es buenísimo! un abrazo desde Rostock ;)
Free Speech is not hate speech la v en alemán se pronuncia como una v,pero los extranjerismos( las palabras que vienen de otras lenguas) la v se pronuncia como la v inglesa Verb- Vase-Adverb.
It was very helpful to understand Superlativ :) I have one question, Jenny. What is difference between Mensch, Mann and Man? Can I use these 3 words as a same meaning?
Dear Jenny, thank you for your explanation. And you are right. I checked "Hammer's German Grammar and Usage" (page 19/561, section 1.1.2.b), which says that "Nouns with the meanings of ships are feminine". Thank you.
Hallo Jenny, ich danke dir für deine Videos. Ich habe eine Frage. Warum sagst du, "Sie ist der neugierigste Mensch, DEN ich kenne", anstatt "DASS ich kenne" zu sagen? Vielen dank, du bist die beste Lehrerin!
Does anyone know why languages like German and French etc. have multiple words for "the?" If I had to guess it would be that that's just how the language started and they never changed it. Or could it have something to do with some words sounding similar? E.g. if a language had "fer hinter" and "far hinder" you would know which is meant by the word used for "the" if you didn't quite hear what they said? I'm just guessing but I really want to know why
A lot of languages from the Indo-European language group have multiple words for "the". This is because in those languages, "the" must agree in terms of gender (male, female, neuter), case (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive), and plurality (singular, plural) with the noun that "the" refers to. All of this is true for German. For example, the nominative singular articles der, das, and die change based on the gender; the masculine singular articles der, den, dem, and des change based on the case; the nominative masculine articles der and die change based on the plurality (der is singular, die is plural). I don't speak any French but I know that it has a similar article system to Italian, so I will use that. In Italian and French, there are only 2 genders (male and female), and no cases, but there is still plurality. So the italian articles are il (masculine singular), i (masculine plural), la (feminine singular) and le (feminine plural). Italian also has the articles lo, gli, and l', but these only exist to make the language flow better, not for any grammatical reason. Italian and French are both Romance languages, meaning they derive from Latin. Latin actually had cases, and it had three genders, just like German, since they are both Indo-European. However, a colloquial form of Latin developed during the Roman period ("vulgar Latin") that eventually lost the case system and one of the genders (neutral). That is the form of Latin that eventually gave rise to Italian and French (and Spanish, among others!). That's why they are all "simpler" than formal Latin. English is also an indo-european language, but it only has one word for "the". The real question is, why does English only have one? The answer is that English LOST the declensions of "the". So English actually changed the most! The other languages are grammatically more similar to the languages from which they developed. Very interesting stuff!
@@ai841deku sorry if I've missed something but, this seems to explain how the system works and how it was subsequently kept, changed or in some cases lost, not why the multiple words came to be in the first place. Could this have originally been for flow as you said the extra Latin words for "the" came from? Now that I think of it, English has multiple words for "a" still, despite getting rid of the multiple words for "the": "a" and "an," which seems to be also for flow e.g. "a orange" sounds broken while "an orange" flows. Sorry again if I've missed something in what you've said.
Oh, I gotcha. It's hard to tell because of how old all those words are; much older than the English "the". That said, Latin didn't actually have articles (in my understanding). The articles were added later because as Latin was simplified and the case structure started to break down, articles were added in order to specify things. But I don't know where the german articles came from since that's not a romance language. Sorry I couldn't be more helpful!!
But to clarify, the different German (and French / Italian) articles mostly come from GRAMMAR, not flow. They specify or agree with gender, number, and/or case. Only gli / lo / l' in Italian are for flow. As far as I know, no German articles ever get modified for the sake of flow.
Danke schön ! Du bist meine Liebeslinglehrerin ! Merci beaucoup ! Tu m’inspires toujours ! btw I wanna share a joke with u, I thought u would be interested in learning it. what do u call somebody who speaks two languages? bilingual. what do u call somebody who speaks many languages? multilingual. what do u call somebody who speaks one language? AMERICAN 🇺🇸😜
du kannst das Video so oft schauen, wie du willst, Wenn du in einen normalen Sprachkurs gehst, hörst du alles nur einmal und musst dir alles aufschreiben. Der Lehrer spricht nicht langsam und er wiederholt es auch nicht 10x. Den Vorteil hast du auf YT. Du kannst dir das Video so oft du willst anschauen.
Sie sind die beste Lehrerin der Welt auf deutsche sprache fur auslander!ich gratuiere Danken!!
Ich finde youtube wunderbar, aber ich finde deutsch auf youtube wunderbarer aber ich finde deinen Kanal auf RUclips am wunderbarsten.
please upload more of B2/C1 listening comprehension videos:)
jenns ist der beste deutschlehrerin, den ich je gekannt habe
What is the difference between "am ...sten" and "der/die/das ...ste"? Is the first one limited to adverbs?
Herzlichen Dank und alles gute für dich Jenny. Super!
This is a lot to absorb for a beginner but you explain it very well,thankyou its an excellent video
You're my best online teacher. Always come here before my Deutsche tests and exams. Thank you Jenny:)
Dankeshon dear Jenny!!
Jenny ist die einzigste Lehrerin, die den Superlativ zu meiner vollsten Zufriedenheit erklären kann. Sie gestaltet die Videos auf optimalste Art lebendiger als andere und in keinster Weise langweilig. Das waren hoffentlich genug Hyperlative. :)
the best teacher out there to learn german ..
Vielen Dank!
Sie sind am besten Lehrerin
Your video are brief and well condensed! You look like the female version of Martin of Deutschland 83.
Hallo Jenny!ich komme aus Indien und deine Videos helfen mir wirklich, jetz lerne ich A2.
Super danke für die Hilfe
I have a question.. When you started to use superlative with noun and article.. Why did sometime had the Adjective a form like normal basic Adjective (grössste, kälteste, teuerste) and in another case it was in superlativ (meinsten,bekantesten)
How can you know what to you and how to say it??
Thanks for answer..
In love with your videos right now! Thanks
usually those another case adjectives like am meisten oder am besten is irregular adjectives. u just gotta remember them, no rules applied
Very helpful.. Thanks a lot 🙌🏼👏🏼
Ich danke Ihnen für ihre Mühe
*Ihre
@@lingoniGERMAN ich danke Ihnen für Ihre Hinweise
I don't know how to thank you .. you are wonderful..
vielen Dank 😊😊😊😊😊
Vielen Dank Jenny.
Soy fiel seguidor de este canal y hasta hoy acabo de descubrir que tenias un canal en el que enseñas aleman en español, estoy sorprendido! tu español es buenísimo! un abrazo desde Rostock ;)
como se encuentra ese canal?
Es dificil explicatelo, así que te voy a facilitar la vida Jorge. Haz click aqui
ruclips.net/video/-e4_j2gDMYg/видео.html
Alguien me explica como pronunciar el número cuatro en alemán: "vier"
Free Speech is not hate speech . Es bastante fácil. Esa v debes de pronunciarla como sí fuera una f- fier
Free Speech is not hate speech la v en alemán se pronuncia como una v,pero los extranjerismos( las palabras que vienen de otras lenguas) la v se pronuncia como la v inglesa Verb- Vase-Adverb.
Hello Jenny ! Thanks a lot for your Lesson. Kiss from France
It was very helpful to understand Superlativ :) I have one question, Jenny. What is difference between Mensch, Mann and Man? Can I use these 3 words as a same meaning?
Danke Janny.
Vielen Dank meine Lieber
Thank you, Jenny.
You are the best teacher and so cute too.
Dankeschön
Danke 😍👍
Are the worksheets and stuff (other than the Skype lessons) free? Also, what is meant by A2/B1, exactly?
Only my videos on RUclips are free.
A2 - Advanced beginner
B1 - pre intermediate
Danke schön 👍
Super danke
Dank
Du bist am besten.
Hallo, Jenny. Alles super, aber gibt es ein Problem. Es geht um ein Echo. Haben Sie einen guten Mikrofon?
Vielen Dank im voraus.
Ur the best😍😍😍thanks❤
At 3:38 the translation should be Tom plays the best. Anyway, thank you for another well prepared lesson. Viele Grüße aus Amberg.
Tom plays the best- She forgot to add the
To be completely honest, I was expecting Jenny's answer, but since you spoted the same mistake, I am glad you replied. Have a nice day.
Jenny is very busy. She has a bunch of subscribers, views, comments.
I hope I will get 300.000 one day at some point in my life.
I am glady for her.
How can i say "as+adj+as" in german?
Dear Jenny, may I know if the ship name, like Queen Mary II, is feminine in German? Thank you.
ship is neutral in German - das Schiff
But since "Queen Mary" was a woman, I automatically said "die"
Dear Jenny, thank you for your explanation. And you are right. I checked "Hammer's German Grammar and Usage" (page 19/561, section 1.1.2.b), which says that "Nouns with the meanings of ships are feminine". Thank you.
@@dorisz744 😂 Bravo you good student
@@almanduku9043 Dear Alman, I am glad that you are interested in this topic :-)
Danke schön bitte
ihave subbed to you almost a year ilove you you have helped me alot
Hallo Jenny, ich danke dir für deine Videos. Ich habe eine Frage. Warum sagst du, "Sie ist der neugierigste Mensch, DEN ich kenne", anstatt "DASS ich kenne" zu sagen? Vielen dank, du bist die beste Lehrerin!
Der Mensch ist männlich, also sein grammatisches Geschlecht ist männlich. Deshalb nutzt man Den
Danke!
Warum ist die App nicht verfügbar in Google Play?😓
Es ist keine mobile App
Does anyone know why languages like German and French etc. have multiple words for "the?" If I had to guess it would be that that's just how the language started and they never changed it. Or could it have something to do with some words sounding similar? E.g. if a language had "fer hinter" and "far hinder" you would know which is meant by the word used for "the" if you didn't quite hear what they said? I'm just guessing but I really want to know why
A lot of languages from the Indo-European language group have multiple words for "the". This is because in those languages, "the" must agree in terms of gender (male, female, neuter), case (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive), and plurality (singular, plural) with the noun that "the" refers to. All of this is true for German. For example, the nominative singular articles der, das, and die change based on the gender; the masculine singular articles der, den, dem, and des change based on the case; the nominative masculine articles der and die change based on the plurality (der is singular, die is plural).
I don't speak any French but I know that it has a similar article system to Italian, so I will use that. In Italian and French, there are only 2 genders (male and female), and no cases, but there is still plurality. So the italian articles are il (masculine singular), i (masculine plural), la (feminine singular) and le (feminine plural). Italian also has the articles lo, gli, and l', but these only exist to make the language flow better, not for any grammatical reason. Italian and French are both Romance languages, meaning they derive from Latin. Latin actually had cases, and it had three genders, just like German, since they are both Indo-European. However, a colloquial form of Latin developed during the Roman period ("vulgar Latin") that eventually lost the case system and one of the genders (neutral). That is the form of Latin that eventually gave rise to Italian and French (and Spanish, among others!). That's why they are all "simpler" than formal Latin.
English is also an indo-european language, but it only has one word for "the". The real question is, why does English only have one? The answer is that English LOST the declensions of "the". So English actually changed the most! The other languages are grammatically more similar to the languages from which they developed. Very interesting stuff!
@@ai841deku sorry if I've missed something but, this seems to explain how the system works and how it was subsequently kept, changed or in some cases lost, not why the multiple words came to be in the first place. Could this have originally been for flow as you said the extra Latin words for "the" came from? Now that I think of it, English has multiple words for "a" still, despite getting rid of the multiple words for "the": "a" and "an," which seems to be also for flow e.g. "a orange" sounds broken while "an orange" flows. Sorry again if I've missed something in what you've said.
Oh, I gotcha. It's hard to tell because of how old all those words are; much older than the English "the". That said, Latin didn't actually have articles (in my understanding). The articles were added later because as Latin was simplified and the case structure started to break down, articles were added in order to specify things. But I don't know where the german articles came from since that's not a romance language. Sorry I couldn't be more helpful!!
But to clarify, the different German (and French / Italian) articles mostly come from GRAMMAR, not flow. They specify or agree with gender, number, and/or case. Only gli / lo / l' in Italian are for flow. As far as I know, no German articles ever get modified for the sake of flow.
Can you make a video about "werden?"
I already did
was bedeutet die Sau rauslassen
Eine Party machen und besofen sein. Alles kaotisch, was haben wir gestern gemacht? Ich erinnere mich an nichst.
Kräftig feiern.
Danke schön ! Du bist meine Liebeslinglehrerin ! Merci beaucoup ! Tu m’inspires toujours !
btw I wanna share a joke with u, I thought u would be interested in learning it.
what do u call somebody who speaks two languages? bilingual.
what do u call somebody who speaks many languages? multilingual.
what do u call somebody who speaks one language? AMERICAN 🇺🇸😜
Vermisse schön!!
Herzlichen willkommenen
Herzlich willkommen
welcome jenny
done
👍
Das ist gut...
you put the über in übersetzerin.
Sie sehen heute sehr schön aus!
Thanksdssd
Ich bin neu in einem Startpunkt, um Deutsch zu lernen
Why did you make wih money worksheets :( :( ? Some people don't have money.
well, I have to make a living.
the hairdresser is not free either even though some people don't have money to buy a haircut. Welcome to capitalism.
Sehr am schönsten lereren,
ich bin der langsamste Deutschlerner, I am the slowest learner of German 🤣
slow but steady wins the race :)
#Gaza_Under_Attack
#SaveGaza
Do bist nett aber deine erklerunge ist es sehr schnell bitte langesame wie so ich danke ihnen
du kannst das Video so oft schauen, wie du willst, Wenn du in einen normalen Sprachkurs gehst, hörst du alles nur einmal und musst dir alles aufschreiben. Der Lehrer spricht nicht langsam und er wiederholt es auch nicht 10x. Den Vorteil hast du auf YT. Du kannst dir das Video so oft du willst anschauen.
sie ist nett .
Ich möchte mich dein telefon nummer halten.
I think is stupid to speak english we can understand 95% of words when you speak Deutsch.
Good for you, not everyone shares your opinion though.
Hello why you not answer
Dankeschön