"Die ganze Woche anwesend" for example.
So the people can understand the shows.
German (this including all of the dialects, not just High German) is a West Germanic language of Indo-European descent.
KindergartenZeitgeistAngstPoltergeistDoppelgängerSchadenfreudeErsatzare all German words that have made it into the English language
Germany, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, and Austria all list German as a national language.
German kids generally learn subjects such as mathematics, language (German), science, history, geography, art, music, and physical education. Additionally, most German students begin to learn a second foreign language, typically English, starting in elementary school.
yes. austria,swizzerland, and Germany all speak the same language
Nearly all of the German population speaks German, as it is the official language of the country. Minorities may speak other languages, but German is the primary language spoken by the majority of the population.
Capital: ViennaOfficial Language: High German (which is the German spoken in Germany) is the official language of Austria. Nearly all Austrians can speak High German, but a minority in the more rural, mountainous areas speak local dialects of German that are quite different from High German.
They are all members of the Centum branch of the Indo-European language family.
The only European language in which all nouns begin with a capital letter is German. This is a grammatical feature of the German language that helps distinguish nouns from other parts of speech in a sentence. Capitalizing all nouns is a unique characteristic of German that is not found in other European languages.
There are no languages that are derived from German. To answer your question, all of them. Actually English is more like German than anything else. It is a really messed up language for sure but I liked to give German credit for most of it.
Other than Germany, German is an official language in Austria, Belgium, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg and Switzerland. It is also an official language in the Italian Province of Bolzano-Bozen.