Ich bin ein Mensch von Berlin (I am a person of Berlin).
Ich habe ein freund in Berlin
He was trying to say "I am a Berliner."
Emile was a male. He was German and maybe that is how he spelled Emil. I know. He was a relative. Janet Weinberg
To say body in German it is Körper
In order to say "My eyes" in German you say meine Augen
it is spieyeln in German
yes emile berliner was born in a german-jewish family
A berliner is a German doughnut/pastry that's made with sweet yeast.
Belrin Wall = Berliner Mauer
Berliner- like the cookies.
German inventor Emil Berliner in 1887
He was trying to say "I am a Berliner."
"ich bin ein berliner"
In 1877, German immigrant, Emile Berliner invented the microphone.
"Frankfurter Allgemeine", "Berliner Morgenpost", and "Der Tagesspiegel".
The legend went that John F Kennedy said "I am a jelly donut" when he was speaking in Berlin when he was trying to say "I am a Berliner" because Berliner Pfannkuchen means jelly donut in German and is usually shortened to Berliner in some parts of Germany. However, in Berlin, that phrase isn't used, instead jelly donuts are referred to as Pfannkuchen in Berlin. So, really the jelly donut myth is simply that, a myth.
The phrase Ich bin Berliner translates as I am a Berliner. N.b. it is not necessary in German to include the indefinite article (Ich bin ein Berliner) in such a sentence. It was famously made by JF Kennedy during his famous Berlin speech on June 26, 1963. The indefinite article is only required in sentences with non-human subjects.As a result of this "inadvertent" inclusion, Kennedy's famous claim is often affectionately translated by Germans as I am a jam doughnut (Berliner is a German word for jam doughnut)
Ich bin ein Berliner