A German could say of himself, "Ich bin deutsch," using the adjective for German; or "Ich bin ein Deutscher" using the noun. National adjectives do not start with a capital letter in German, but nouns do.
The German word for a German person is "Deutscher" for a man and "Deutsche" for a woman.
The word "German" can function as both a noun and an adjective in English. As a noun, it refers to a person from Germany or the German language. As an adjective, it describes something or someone related to Germany or the German culture.
"Sind" is the third person plural form of the verb "sein" in German, which means "to be." It is often used with plural subjects, such as "sie sind" meaning "they are."
The word for platypus in German is "Schnabeltier".
No, "danka" is not a German word. The correct German word is "danke". "Danke" is the German word for "thank you".
The German word "Bayer" typically refers to someone who comes from Bavaria, a region in southern Germany. It can also specifically refer to a person from the pharmaceutical company Bayer AG.
Dorf Person
If you mean lap in a sporting sense, the German word is Runde. If you mean the lap of a person, then the German word is Schoß
Do you mean Mensch? That's a person.
German (person) = AllemandGermans = Allemands
Check your spelling. The word does not seem to be in any English dictionary. The word heiligtum is a German word for sanctuary. The word fahren is a German word for travel or go, and fahrt is 3rd person singlular. I have looked in a German dictionary and websites and not found heiltumfahrten.
There is no word as ziet in German.The closest German words are:Zeit - timezieht - pulls (third person conjugation of ziehen)
Fabriques is not a German word but French. It is the second person present conjugation of the verb fabriquer (tu fabriques) and can be translated as:makefabricateproducedo
Schadenfreude (n.) = harmsglee
to know a person or a place: kennen to know a fact: wissen
Chre is not a German word
The German word geht is the present tense, third person singular conjugation of the verb gehenEr/sie/es geht = he/she/it goes
willeIf, by will you mean the written document containing instructions for the disposition of a person's effects at death, then the word is Testament