Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - What are the common expressions in German?

What are the common expressions in German?

week

M (short for meter)) Montag? Monday

Meter (short for meter)? Dean Staag? Tuesday

Mi (short for meter) Mitwicz Wednesday.

Mi (short for meter) Donna Staag Thursday.

Meter (short for meter) Friday Freedom Day.

Meter (short for meter) Saturday

M (short for meter) Sonntag Sunday.

moon

January

February? February

der M? Rz March

April? April

der? Mai? May

Yuni in June

der? Julie. July

August

September

Oktoberfest October

November

December

Extended data:

German (English: German) belongs to the Indo-European-Germanic-West Germanic branch, and its standard form is called Standard German, which is the official language of Austria, Belgium, Germany, Porzano, Liechtenstein, Luxemburg and Switzerland, and is written in Latin alphabet.

German can be divided into six parts: vocabulary, grammar, listening, speaking, reading and writing.

German contains 30 letters, four of which are special letters. German has its own unique pronunciation rules. If you master the pronunciation rules (usually around 10 class), you can read ordinary German articles smoothly.

There are no phonetic symbols of German words in general word lists and dictionaries. You need to read according to the pronunciation rules of German. If there are special circumstances, such as words from other languages without German, they are usually marked with pronunciation.

German Yi language * * * has 42 phonemes, 19 vowels and 23 consonants. There are three nouns in German: masculine, neuter and feminine. Can't be divided into words corresponding to Chinese. For example, the German word "girl" (m? dchen).

German beginners have to accumulate a certain vocabulary to find a little so-called internal law. Taking the form of words as an example, nouns ending in -er, -or, -ist, -ant and -ent are mostly masculine; With -e, -ung, -heit, -schaft, -in, -t? Nouns ending in t, -tion, -session, -sion and -ie are mostly feminine; Nouns ending in-Chen,-Laing and -NIS are mostly neutral words.

In German, verbs should be shifted. According to the change of personal tense, verbs have to change accordingly, as do the changes of the first and second participles. German word order can be divided into three types: positive word order, negative word order and final word order.

Everyday german conversation

1, asking time

What's the matter? sp? t? ist? es?

What time is it now?

B: Really? ist? 1 1? Uhr? 35? One minute.

Let me see. It's eleven thirty-five.

A: Mine? Uhr? geht? zwei? bis? fünf? Minuten? vor? (nach)。

My watch usually gains (loses) two to five minutes a day.

B: My love? Uhr? geht? immer? Ganzi? Ginau My watch is always accurate.

Step 2 talk about the weather

A: It was at night in America.

It looks like rain.

I don't know. Although it rained, we went.

I don't think so. The weather forecast says it will be sunny.

A: It's raining too hard, and it won't rain again.

But the weather forecast may go wrong.

B: Mr. Ferrer is a gentleman, isn't he?

We all make mistakes, don't we?

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-German