you can understand English but German is hard to read
English and German belong to different language families, with English being a Germanic language and German being a Western Germanic language. English has a larger vocabulary due to its history of borrowing words from various languages, while German has a more structured grammar with cases, genders, and verb conjugations. Pronunciation and word order also differ between the two languages.
Answer 1:There isn't any difference, "German" being the translation of "deutsch". Perhaps you mean Dutch, which is another language. It is related, but there are many differences.Answer 2:In case you actually mean Dutch, it's the language spoken in the Netherlands (Holland) and it's a close language to German and English (kind of in the middle of the two). It's said that the word "Dutch" comes from a corruption of the word "Deutsch", which means german, nowadays Dutch means something from the Netherlands (including the language).
German and Italian are both Indo-European languages, but they belong to different language branches. German belongs to the Germanic branch, while Italian belongs to the Romance branch. This means they have different language structures, vocabulary, and phonetics.
Germany does not use the Cyrillic alphabet, Russia does.
The main differences between these languages lie in their vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation. Each language has its own unique set of rules and structures that govern how it is spoken and written. Additionally, they belong to different language families, with German being Germanic, Greek being Hellenic, English being Germanic, Russian being Slavic, French being Romance, and Italian being Romance.
Ralf Schumacher speaks German as his native language.
Answer 1:There isn't any difference, "German" being the translation of "deutsch". Perhaps you mean Dutch, which is another language. It is related, but there are many differences.Answer 2:In case you actually mean Dutch, it's the language spoken in the Netherlands (Holland) and it's a close language to German and English (kind of in the middle of the two). It's said that the word "Dutch" comes from a corruption of the word "Deutsch", which means german, nowadays Dutch means something from the Netherlands (including the language).
Roderich Cescotti has written: 'Luftfahrt-Definitionen' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Aviation dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Luftfahrt-definitionen, Englisch-Deutsch/Deutsch-Englisch = Glossary of aeronautical definitions, English-German/German-English' 'Aerospace Dictionary, German to English and English to German' 'Glossary of aeronautical definitions; English-German, German-English' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language
One in english, the other german.
German is the origanal language.
German is a language very similar to English due to the fact that English is a Germanic language, and it's quite easy.(ENGLISH: Cat ; GERMAN: Katze)
Ignaz Emanuel Wessely has written: 'Burt's Italian-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Italian, Italian language 'Handy dictionary of the English and French languages' -- subject(s): French language, Dictionaries, English language, French, English 'A New Pocket Dictionary of the English & German Languages' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, German, German language 'Handy dictionary of the English and Italian languages' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Italian, English language, Italian language, English 'English-Italian and Italian-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Italian, Italian language 'Wessely's pocket dictionaries: English-German and German-English dictionary' -- subject(s): German language, Dictionaries 'Junior classic German dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, German, German language, Lending library 'Handy dictionary of the English and Spanish languages' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, Spanish, Spanish language 'Handy dictionary of the English and German languages=' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, German language, English language 'A new pocket dictionary of the English & French languages' 'Pocket dictionary of the English and French languages' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, English, English language, French, French language
High German and Low German are two different branches of the German language. High German is spoken in the central and southern regions of Germany, while Low German is spoken in the northern regions and the Netherlands. High German is the standard form of the language, while Low German has many dialects and variations.
American schools talk in English, and German schools talk in German.
The first language is compulsorily english, then as their second language they usually have to choose between spanish and german.
Charles J Hyman has written: 'German-English, English-German electronics dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, German, Electronics, English, German language, English language
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
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