In German, "der" is the definite article used for masculine nouns. It is considered neutral in terms of gender, as it does not have a feminine or neuter form like "die" and "das" do.
A neutral solution is true neutral with a pH of 7,00.
Esters are neutral compounds
Neutral terms are terms that are neutral. Therefore, they create neutral outcomes when they collide with explosive material.I hope this answers your question.
Beige is a neutral color. Shift the car into neutral. When it comes to war, Switzerland remains neutral.
A Ph of 7 is neutral.
The definite article der is masculine, die is feminine and das is neutral.
It depends on the context of the word. "Die" is for feminine words, "Der" for masculine, and "Den" for neutral.
das is used for neutral words, which are not included in male-der or female-die, form
Der (male) Die (female) Das (Neutral) Die (plural) It depends on what you want to say. School is feminine in German so you would say 'Die Schule'.
Der (male) Die (female) Das (Neutral) Die (plural) It depends on what you want to say. School is feminine in German so you would say 'Die Schule'.
the german language has three articles: der (masculine), die (feminine), das (neutral) there is no rule that makes a word either masculine, feminine or neutral. native speakers just know, non-native speakers must learn it by heart.
The song is called "Google Translator"
Sting, De do do do.
O Fortuna from Carmina BuranaWHAT?!?!?!?!?!?!?
English: "the rascal" means in German: "der Bengel", "der Frechdachs", "das Früchtchen", "der Gauner", "der Lausebengel", "der Lausejunge, "der Lump", "der Schlingel", "das Schlitzohr", "der Schuft", "der Schurke", "der Spitzbube".
Yes, the German language has masculine, feminine, and neuter nouns. The gender of a noun determines the article used before it and can affect other parts of the sentence such as adjectives or pronouns.
It depends. If the noun is male, that is, the article is der, then it is ein. If the noun is female, that is, the article is die, then it is eine. If the noun is neutral, that is, the article is das, then is is also ein. Also, there are 4 cases in german. In Nominativ it is the same with the above cases. In Genitiv (des, der, des): eines, einer, eines respectively. In Dativ (dem, der, dem): einem, einer, einem respectively. In Akkusativ (den, die, das): einen, eine, ein. So: (the last article is plural. there is no plural for "a") der, die, das, die des, der, des, der dem, der, dem, den den, die, das, die Corresponds to... ein, eine, ein eines, einer, eines einem, einer, einem einen, eine, ein Hope this helps.