It is here. The lowercase german[us] along with germane is Latin for sibling.
yes, it is a proper noun
That is the correct spelling of kaiser, a German emperor. (Capitalized if it precedes a name.)
Yes. You should always capitalize proper nouns. German Empire is a proper noun because it names a specific place.
Perhaps it is from when all nouns were capitalised, as in today's German.
In German, it is the same , November In Spanish it is noviembre (not capitalized). In French, it is novembre (not capitalized) In Italian, it is also novembre. In Russian, it is ноябрь (nojabr') In Polish, it is listopad. (see related link for other languages)
The spelling is auf Wiedersehen (until seeing again). This is the two-word German phrase for "be seeing you" or "see you later" and the noun Wiedersehen is capitalized in German text. The W is pronounced as a V.
The German word "Tag" is capitalized when it starts a sentence or if it is a noun, but it is not typically capitalized when used in the middle of a sentence as a normal word.
It's German Shepherd, both the G and the S are capitalized.
Other than the fact that it should be capitalized (in German all nouns are capitalized), yes.
Yes.
German is. Submarine is not. "A German submarine surfaced in the North Sea."
Yes. It should be German eco nomy.
Only if it's at the beginning of a sentence. Unlike in German, not all nouns are capitalized in English.
German is an adjective. It's a proper adjective, which means that it is always capitalized.
Arme means arms in German. Nouns are capitalized in German. If you mean arms as in weapons the word is Waffen.
Yes, it is a proper name.
"Bruder," and it is always capitalized because it is a noun.
Kusse is not a German word, I assume you mean küsse or Küsseküsse (not capitalized!) is the imperative of the verb küssen - küsse mich! - kiss me!Küsse (capitalized!) translates as kisses