German is the official language in Germany, Austria, Luxembourg and Liechtenstein, and is one of the official languages in Switerland. It is also widely spoken in countries near Germany (especially Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary).
Aargau is part of german speaking switzerland.So the language there is german
Germany, Austria and the northern part of Switzerland
"The Awful German Language" was written by Mark Twain in 1880 as part of his book "A Tramp Abroad." In this humorous essay, Twain describes his struggles with the complexities and idiosyncrasies of the German language.
For the most part, no. Pennsylvania German (once called Pennsylvania Dutch) is a different dialect, bordering on being a different language. But with a lot of patience, they can cross the language barrier fairly easily.
The closest language to German is Dutch. Both languages are part of the West Germanic language family and share similarities in vocabulary, grammar, and syntax.
Since there are about 100 million people speaking German as first language, it is about 1.5 % of the world's population. Including the people speaking German as second language make it double.
Teil vier is the translation in German. It is translated from English to German. German is mostly spoken in the European countries.
During World War 1, due to anti-German sentiment, schools in the United States stopped teaching the German language and sauerkraut was sometimes renamed "liberty cabbage." This was part of efforts to dissociate from German culture and avoid associations with the enemy during the war.
German is spoken by about 100 million people as a first language around the world and by about 80 million as a second language.
BETTER!
spanish
* Germany * Austria * Switzerland (part only) * Liechtenstein