That sentence directly translates as 'Good, she can tail speak'. Although I think somebody might have been reffering to being able to tell lies, or tell tales.
The sentence makes no sense whatsoever and certainly has nothing to do with telling lies or tales. Given the alternative vulgar and carnal meaning of Schwanz I suspect this is an attempt to express something of a sexual nature
"Tail" I think.
Tail
Languages that have similar sentence structure to English include German, Dutch, and Swedish.
That is not a coherent german sentence. But, loosely translated... "oh you are not german"
Your new exchange student (German) speaks English well.
There is also the word "also" in the German language. "Also" translated from English to German: "auch" or "außerdem" "Also" translated from German to English: "so" or "well" In context: German sentence: "Also, bist du es!" translation: "So it`s you!" German sentence: "Also, ich denke..." translation: "Well, i think..." Auch
"In German, it has no meaning".True, but schwantz is an American pronunciation of the German or (especially) Yiddish schwanz, meaning tail, or slang for penis; it would be used as a derogatory term for someone, as in calling a person a "dick" or a "schmuck".
It means, "Where is my brother?".
German's not weird because if you compare to English it's sentence structure and each word it put together logically.
Yes, English does not have declensions like some other languages such as Latin or German. In English, nouns do not change their form based on their role in a sentence.
The meaning of the German word und in English is and. And is a conjunction used in the English language, like Jack and Jill are friends and they like pie.
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