Das Futur 2 Indikativ Aktiv mit Modalverb wird mit dem Präsens des Hilfsverbs „werden“, dem Infinitiv von haben, dem Infinitiv des Vollverbs und dem Infinitiv des Modalverbs (=3x Infinitiv) gebildet. Also: Das Kind wird nach Hause haben gehen müssen.
@9:06 (Futur 2) Would it be possible to add "seit letzter Woche" to the sentence? Mein Bruder wird jeden Morgen seit letzter Woche zwei Eier gegessen haben -- "Since last week, my brother will have eaten 2 eggs every morning" ?? -- Implying that maybe he started eating 2 eggs in the morning since last week, whereas he may have not eaten anything at all for breakfast prior to last week? -- By the way, these lessons are amazing! I was stationed in German 20 years ago, learned some German, came back to the states in 2006, forgot most of it, but have been on a mission to get back to learning the language again, hopefully much better this time! B1 is my goal by next year! Thanks for the help!
@@ItsBigTexYall *Mein Bruder wird seit letzter Woche jeden Morgen zwei Eier gegessen haben. You need to order the time from broad to narrow: seit letztem Jahr jeden Donnerstag morgens gegen 8:00 Uhr.
Dankeschön... Sehr ausführlicher Unterricht! I typed "The child WILL HAVE HAD to go home" into DeepL and it gave: "Das Kind wird nach Hause gehen müssen." okay, fair enough. (although... we don't need to throw a "haben" in there somewhere?) But then I see it gives (as an alternative construction): "Das Kind muss nach Hause gehen." 😲 Google translate also gives this translation. Are these 2 sentences interchangeable? Boah!! (I've been wanting to say that) And now I see that "gehen" can be merely implied when using "müssen" as in "Ich muss zurück" meaning "I have to go back." Help
"Das Kind wird nach Hause gehen müssen." is an expectation that the kid is obliged (müssen) to go home in the near future OR an announcement that the kid is obliged to go home. It hasn't happened yet, but has to happen (not will happen!) in the future. It's an expectation/announcement of fulfillment of an obligation in the future basically. "Das Kind muss nach Hause gehen." is a statement like "The kid has to go home." No, you cannot use them interchangeably.
"Mein Bruder ist im Cafe gewesen" means "My brother has been to the café", not "my brother was being in the café." As you certainly know, the Perfekt tense in German is made with the auxiliary HABEN or SEIN, depending on the verb in question, but should always be understood and translated to English as the auxiliary HAVE.
English tenses express different ideas than German tenses. Saying you should translate the Perfekt tense to present perfect is telling that you have no idea about English and that you are German.
No, natives use the perfekt to mean the simple past every day. They very rarely use präteritum in day to day conversations. Remember this is a different language with a different set of rules and customs. Languages don't always translate directly into each other. Please watch 1:44
Wenn du aus der Schule kommst, sind wir schon gegengen. How to translate the second part of the sentence? What is the use of "schon" here? Could you tell how to use and translate time words like seit, schon.. into perfekt?
We were already gone when you left school. "schon" in this instance translates to "already". But Germans would rather say: Wir sind schon weg, wenn du aus der Schule kommst. -> We are already gone when you leave school.
Only if you are trying to learn it all at once. This lesson is designed for people who have already learned several of the German tenses and they need a way to organize them all in their brains. Most of the time you need 3 tenses. Präsens for now, Futur 1 for later, and Perfekt for before. All of the others are icing on the cake.
@@roaneeroane3451 english itself has several past tenses but I'll try to explain it the best I can (I'm a beginner so I might make mistakes) Präteritum seems to correspond to past simple and past continuous but it's usually used especially for sein when talking; ich aß ein Apfel (you wouldn't usually say this), ich war in der Schule (you would usually say this) Perfekt corresponds to present perfect simple and present perfect continuous HOWEVER although these are called present (in english at least) they are practically used to talk about events that are now complete. Perfekt seems to be usually used for the same purpose as Präteritum when talking but with verbs that aren't sein; ich habe ein Apfel gegessen (you would usually say this), ich bin in der Schule gewesen (you wouldn't usually say this) In a nutshell there are two (and one more but let's ignore it for now) tenses that are used to talk about the past commonly each with their own roles. Präteritum and Perfekt.
Me, an italian dude with a terrible cold and sore throat, drained of any force, watching an english guy teaching german verbs at 4 am in the morning
Living the dream.
Bravissimo 🎉
Great stuff; so informative. I like your way of explanation, and your tone of voice is very unique. 👌
An ammazing style, outstanding, and easy to understand the tenses. Grateful for the lecture
Commendable
Toll Gemacht!: Dankeschön Herr Antrim, es fällt mir schwer, Deutsch zu lernen
Deutsche Sprache, schwere Sprache... Aber du kannst es schaffen!
very informative easy and beginner friendly, you have a sub, danke schön
I'm glad you enjoyed it. Let me know if you have any questions along the way.
very helpful video. it will help my self study of learning German
great video, you made the tenses very easy to understand, thanks and congratulations for your great work!
Super Lektion. Danke 🙏
Thanks a Lot, i have Had all my question answered in thie Video. Again to words to perfectly thanks you
Thanks for the video, it really helped.
Thank you very much Herr
Your videos are great. Thank you!
Well needed vlog!!! Thank u🎉
Das Futur 2 Indikativ Aktiv mit Modalverb wird mit dem Präsens des Hilfsverbs „werden“, dem Infinitiv von haben, dem Infinitiv des Vollverbs und dem Infinitiv des Modalverbs (=3x Infinitiv) gebildet.
Also: Das Kind wird nach Hause haben gehen müssen.
Thanks a lot 🥰 your explanation is very clear and concise. By the way your accent is unique👌
Thank you! 😃
His German accent or American English accent?
Vielen Dank 😊
Thanks and respect! 👍💐
Awesome video!! thanks!
Thank God for you.
@9:06 (Futur 2) Would it be possible to add "seit letzter Woche" to the sentence? Mein Bruder wird jeden Morgen seit letzter Woche zwei Eier gegessen haben -- "Since last week, my brother will have eaten 2 eggs every morning" ?? -- Implying that maybe he started eating 2 eggs in the morning since last week, whereas he may have not eaten anything at all for breakfast prior to last week? -- By the way, these lessons are amazing! I was stationed in German 20 years ago, learned some German, came back to the states in 2006, forgot most of it, but have been on a mission to get back to learning the language again, hopefully much better this time! B1 is my goal by next year! Thanks for the help!
I think that works. It feels a little out of place, but not terrible.
@@MrLAntrim Thanks for the feedback. My biggest struggle with German is knowing how to word things the way they would.
@@ItsBigTexYall *Mein Bruder wird seit letzter Woche jeden Morgen zwei Eier gegessen haben. You need to order the time from broad to narrow: seit letztem Jahr jeden Donnerstag morgens gegen 8:00 Uhr.
Thank you! Btw, I was surprised to read that you learned german in high school. I almost thought you were a native speaker 😮😀
OMG... ich habe gedacht, dass er Muttersprachler auch war!
Dankeschön... Sehr ausführlicher Unterricht! I typed "The child WILL HAVE HAD to go home" into DeepL and it gave: "Das Kind wird nach Hause gehen müssen." okay, fair enough. (although... we don't need to throw a "haben" in there somewhere?) But then I see it gives (as an alternative construction): "Das Kind muss nach Hause gehen." 😲 Google translate also gives this translation. Are these 2 sentences interchangeable? Boah!! (I've been wanting to say that) And now I see that "gehen" can be merely implied when using "müssen" as in "Ich muss zurück" meaning "I have to go back." Help
"Das Kind wird nach Hause gehen müssen." is an expectation that the kid is obliged (müssen) to go home in the near future OR an announcement that the kid is obliged to go home. It hasn't happened yet, but has to happen (not will happen!) in the future. It's an expectation/announcement of fulfillment of an obligation in the future basically.
"Das Kind muss nach Hause gehen." is a statement like "The kid has to go home."
No, you cannot use them interchangeably.
excellent
"Mein Bruder ist im Cafe gewesen" means "My brother has been to the café", not "my brother was being in the café." As you certainly know, the Perfekt tense in German is made with the auxiliary HABEN or SEIN, depending on the verb in question, but should always be understood and translated to English as the auxiliary HAVE.
English tenses express different ideas than German tenses. Saying you should translate the Perfekt tense to present perfect is telling that you have no idea about English and that you are German.
No, natives use the perfekt to mean the simple past every day. They very rarely use präteritum in day to day conversations. Remember this is a different language with a different set of rules and customs. Languages don't always translate directly into each other. Please watch 1:44
The last example is , Das kind hatte nach hause gehen müssen. Is the sentence is right?
OR
Das kind hatte nach hause gegangen müssen .
First one :)
Dear Levi! I think that Präteritum, da preterite, n Futur 2, the future perfect tense are NOT used in the german language today.
All three tenses are used because they are vital to the language and in communication. Please refrain from saying stupid things.
Which form of Essen is aß ? I’m just an A1 Student . A beginner but pls help me if u can . Thank you
Präteritum (simple past, written past)
@@aswathynoble4822 Looking for a learning partner am also an A1 student
Hallo Gruß aus südlich Guanajuato México 👍
Wenn du aus der Schule kommst, sind wir schon gegengen.
How to translate the second part of the sentence?
What is the use of "schon" here?
Could you tell how to use and translate time words like seit, schon.. into perfekt?
We were already gone when you left school.
"schon" in this instance translates to "already".
But Germans would rather say: Wir sind schon weg, wenn du aus der Schule kommst. -> We are already gone when you leave school.
🇧🇷💖🇩🇪
This seem complex
Only if you are trying to learn it all at once. This lesson is designed for people who have already learned several of the German tenses and they need a way to organize them all in their brains. Most of the time you need 3 tenses. Präsens for now, Futur 1 for later, and Perfekt for before. All of the others are icing on the cake.
Which german tense is similar to the English past tense.
@@roaneeroane3451 english itself has several past tenses but I'll try to explain it the best I can (I'm a beginner so I might make mistakes)
Präteritum seems to correspond to past simple and past continuous but it's usually used especially for sein when talking; ich aß ein Apfel (you wouldn't usually say this), ich war in der Schule (you would usually say this)
Perfekt corresponds to present perfect simple and present perfect continuous HOWEVER although these are called present (in english at least) they are practically used to talk about events that are now complete. Perfekt seems to be usually used for the same purpose as Präteritum when talking but with verbs that aren't sein; ich habe ein Apfel gegessen (you would usually say this), ich bin in der Schule gewesen (you wouldn't usually say this)
In a nutshell there are two (and one more but let's ignore it for now) tenses that are used to talk about the past commonly each with their own roles. Präteritum and Perfekt.
English is actually more precise than German. 😂
You make it too confusing.
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻