Yes.
60% study German so 40% study French and not German.
Find the number of students at a college taking at least one of the languages French, German and Russian from the following data: 65 study French, 20 study French and German, 45 study German, 25 study French and Russian, 42 study Russian, 15 study German and Russian while 8 study all three languages.
Vincent O'Connor has written: 'German revision for Junior Certificate' -- subject(s): Study and teaching (Secondary), German language 'German revision for Leaving Certificate' -- subject(s): German language, Examinations, Study guides, Study and teaching
I like to study world war 2 in German is ich studiere gern' den zweiten Weltkrieg
The subjects they study is German, math, English, science, gym, visual arts, and music.
maths,english,scinence,
Karl Breul has written: 'The teaching of modern foreign languages in our secondary schools' -- subject(s): Accessible book, German language, Study and teaching, Language and languages 'Heath's new German and English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, German, German language 'A handy bibliographical guide to the study of the German language and literature for the use of students and teachers of German' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Bibliography, German language, German literature, History and criticism, Study and teaching 'Heath's German and English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, German, German language, English language, English 'The teaching of modern foreign languages and the training of teachers' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Study and teaching, Language and languages, Modern languages, German language und literature
It would help if you gave more context, but the German verb for "to study" is studieren. I study = ich studiere You (singular, informal) study = du studierst He/she/it studies = er/sie/es studiert We study = wir studieren You (pluaral informal) = Ihr studiert They study = sie studieren You (singular/plural formal) = Sie studieren
The subjects they study is German, math, English, science, gym, visual arts, and music.
they studied about clothes
It takes about four years of intensive study to become fluent in German. Secondary and high school German will not make this happen. Most colleges will not make this happen.Intensive study means either living in a German speaking country and attending classes in German or one to two hours of study every day for four years.
Some notable German Bible translations for study and comparison include the Luther Bible (Lutherbibel), the Einheitsbersetzung, and the Gute Nachricht Bibel. These translations are widely used and respected within the German-speaking Christian community.