caro, genitive singular carnis
nominative ("Meat fell") : "caro" (no 'n') / plural "carnes"
genitive ("belonging to the meat") : "carnis" / plural "carnum"
dative ("at the meat") : "carni" / plural "carnus"
accusative ("I ate the meat") : "carnem" / plural "carnes"
ablative ("from the meat") : "carne" / plural "carnibus"
locative ("where the meat is") : "carni" or "carne" / plural "carnibus"
vocative ("Meat, what are you doing in the soup?") : "caro" / plural "carnes"
You might notice that some of the forms are identical. For example, "carni" is used for the dative singular, and could be used for the locative singular (though these cases have different plurals).
The German word for pork meat is "Schweinefleisch."
The German word for chicken is (das) Huhn or (das) Hühnchen.
"dead meat" is "totes Fleisch" in German.
German Shephard eats meat.
Carnevale is an Italian equivalent of the German word Fasching.Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It originates in the Latin phrase carnem levare ("to eliminate the meat"). The pronunciation will be "KAR-ne-VA-le" in Italian.
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Chre is not a German word
"mit" is the German word for "with".
The German word for their is "Ihre."
The word FROM in German is von
The German word for when is wenn.
The word for is in German - " ist "