Moechten Sie gerne schwimmen gehen?
Moosha does not exist in German, but a Samurai would yell out "moosha" just before killing someone.
One would say in Deutsch (German) ''Willkommen''.
If you are talking to someone you know informally (you use tú with them), you would say "sé más profesional". If it is someone you know formally (you used usted with them), you would say "sea más profesional"
Probably I'm 14 yes i do llike ross
that is what I would llike to know, where can I purchase a ken kostick soup pot?
It's not a word. Do you mean Salzburger? That would be someone from the city of Salzburg.
you can tell someones nationality by their references usually americans look mixed. for example if someone is german and french they would look mixed german and french.
How do you speak it? It's much harder than you think. The German alphabet is just like the American one, plus 4 extra letters. 3 of those letters are regular letters, a, e, and u with 2 dots above them. They are called umlauts (OOM-lowts). The 4th looks like a capital B, but it is a way to replace a double 'S'. To speak German, you must sometimes roll your r's, but you don't have to. There are actually 2 different ways to speak German. Southern Germany speaks German different than Northern Germany. For instance, 'hello' FORMALLY* would translate to 'Guten Tag' in Northern Germany. 'Hello' in Southern Germany FORMALLY is 'Grüß Gott' That is the capital B I talked about earlier. If you are interested in more, I suggest Mango Libraries they are hepling me learn French. :) *Formally meaning that you don't know the person. You regularly in Germany do not speak to someone if you don't know them.
They would be referred to as being "European"
A samurai is a type of japenese ninja,that is how I would put it. There just like soldiers that serve their country, just llike the army.
A Germanophile is someone who loves all things German. A similar identity would be a francophile, an anglophile, et cetera.
The closest German word is "Brunnen" what means well/fountain. Then a "Brunner" would be someone who built wells/fountains. It's also possible it's a local relation e.g. "someone from Brünen"