"Ich würde gerne" is the phrase you are looking for.
Actually that is not a phrase you would simply translate. In English you can answer with a "Yeah, I´d like to" but in German you just don´t say "Das würde ich gerne machen" because it is too formal. But if you want to say something like "I´d like to go out with you sometime" you can say "Ich würde gerne mal mit dir ausgehen".
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Having spoken German all my life and qualified as an English-German translator, I'm shocked to learn that the phrase Ich würde gerne is far too formal for me to use and that it wouldn't be said in German....what am I going to tell my friend? Only today she asked me "Möchtest Du morgen ins Kino gehen?" - "do you want to go to the cinema tomorrow?" and I in my ignorance replied "Ja, das würde ich gerne" - "Yes, I'd like to"
id probaly say soccer
nounDreiDreierpersonally id use 1. Drei.
ID, as in identification card, is Ausweis in German
to say Rosie in German you say Rosie :) i like pie
I like you is ich mag dich in German.
We say it like u do, it's English in German too.
well in Germany you say usually like normalerweise in German
"Fleisch" is how you say "flesh" in German. Its pronunciation is like "flesh", but with an "I" sound (I as in me) where the e is.
Sounds like a German name.In German in would be pronounced like VA-guhn-ZELL-ah.
You can say it in a formal way as follows: Antworten Sie mich. You can also say it informally like: Antwort mich.
To say 'a' in German it is either ein, eine or einen, depending on whether the word after it is masculine, feminine or neuter. To say 'the' it is der, die or das.
The German letter 'i' is pronounced like the English letter 'e'