"Er mag Bücher/Er liebt Bücher" or "Er liebt es zu lesen". More colloquial would be "Er ist ein (echter) Bücherwurm", "Er ist eine (echte) Leseratte", "Er ist (ganz) vernarrt in Bücher", "Er kann von Büchern gar nicht genug kriegen",...
A bookish fellow is often called a bibliophile or a bookworm, indicating a strong interest or passion for books and reading.
"Bookish" is an adjective commonly used to describe things related to books or characteristics associated with reading or literature.
John C. Traupman has written: 'New College German and English Dictionary' -- subject(s): German, German language, Dictionaries, English language, English 'Conversational Latin for oral proficiency' -- subject(s): Colloquial Latin language, Conversation and phrase books, Latin language, Latin language, Colloquial 'Latin is fun' 'The new international Webster's German & English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, German, German language, English language, English 'Lingua Latina' -- subject(s): Latin language, Grammar
Qian Kan has written: 'Colloquial Chinese' -- subject(s): Chinese language, English, Grammar, Spoken Chinese, Conversation and phrase books 'Colloquial Chinese'
Loosely put a book is reading material but so are magazines and e - articles. A tome is a word meaning large book.
Me and my daughter are great big fans of Enid Blyton even though she is dead. But most of Enid Blyton books are written in English but with a hint of German. I can tell you this because in some of her books like "The Famous Five" when the characters greet each other by saying "Hello" she spells it by saying "Hallo" which is German for "Hello". So by this I am assuming she speaked English and German but I also have a small feeling she must have spoke French. I am not sure about her speaking French. Some of her books may have had a little French which must have been the language she picked up on in School. I am not fully sure about her speaking French but I'm positive about her speaking German and English. Read lots of her books and find out! Enjoy her books and keep reading!
One can find a large number of German books either online or in local libraries. The local libraries have a foreign language section that carries German books.
The number of books published worldwide in German that are written in German is difficult to determine precisely due to the sheer volume of books published in multiple languages. However, German-language books written in German make up a significant portion of the overall global publishing industry.
Books is die Bücher in German.
W. A. Kelly has written: 'German and Netherlandish bibliographies and catalogues' -- subject(s): Bibliography of bibliographies, Rare books, Early printed books, German imprints, Dutch imprints, Cataloging of rare books, Bibliographical citations 'Dutch, Flemish and German bibliographies and catalogues' -- subject(s): Bibliography of bibliographies, Rare books, Early printed books, German imprints, Dutch imprints, Cataloging of rare books, Bibliographical citations
They can be translated, if written; or interpreted, if spoken. A useful intermediary is a German-Spanish dictionary, where you can see that German 'Mann'= Spanish 'hombre'; 'Frau'= 'mujer'; 'Kind'= 'nino/nina', etc. Like Spanish (and unlike English), German has gender, so the word for 'the' is: 'der' = 'el' 'die' = 'la' but German also has a neuter form 'das'. Conjugation is also more complicated in German than in Spanish.
somebody is saying it