Which sentence is correct?A. Wir habe gesprochen B. Wir gesprochen
(its supposed to be in perfekt)

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: Translation: A. We have spoken        B. We talked

The correct sentence is B. WE TALKED.

It is correct because it give a complete thought. When they said "We talked", it means that two persons had a conversation. One is on one side, the other is on the other side.

choice A. We have spoken. It does not express a complete thought. If did not provide an answer, instead, it raised a question: With whom did they speak?
A correct sentence for choice A would be: We have spoken with Amy.
The "We" is comprised of at least two persons that are on the same side while Amy is on the other side of the conversation.

Answer 2
Answer: I will dispute the previous answer...

General construction for the perfekt tense:
Auxiliary verb (conjugated) + Past Participle (at the end of the sentence)

For the perfekt tense you need to have an auxiliary verb (Hilfsverb) in order to grammatically make sense in German... These hilfsverbs are either haben/sein depending which one the verb has been assigned...These you will just have to memorize. 
Although, majority of the time sein will apply to verbs of movement while haben will apply to those that are stationary or don't have any change in location. 

Technically neither of these would be completely correct in German.

A. Does not have "haben" conjugated correctly
B. Missing the hilfsverb 
"Wir haben gesprochen" would be the correct answer. 

Were these given on an assignment or did you make up these sentences? 

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What are some advantages and disadvantages of (your) school/school rules? In german, and say what it means too. please.
please could you translate into German: "I am sometimes stressed because I have a lot of homework to do. When I am stressed I become tired or I have a headache"

Make a sentence out of these words (some might need to be changed to be grammatically correct) Die Männer, fahren, nach Berlin, werden, morgan

Plz answer

Answers

Answer:

the men go to berlin to be morgan

Explanation:

Die Männer werden morgen nach Berlin fahren.
The men will drive to Berlin tomorrow.

Fill in the correct conjugation of the verb given in parenthesis: er ___ (fragen) ​

Answers

Er (fragt) fragen is past tense and Fragt is present

What is the difference between Nom, Akk, and Dativ cases? How can you identify the case? Please give examples!

Answers

The cases can be very confusing at times, but once you get the hang of it, you'll identify it more clearly.

The subject does the ACTION.
The subject is the same word as nominative (nom).

The direct object is affected by the verb.
The direct object is the same word as accusative (akk).

The indirect object is the receiver of the direct object.
The indirect object is the same word as dative (dativ).

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EXAMPLE:
I see the book.
I have a book.

GERMAN TRANSLATE:
Ich sehe das Buch.
Ich habe ein Buch.

Ich = I 
sehe = see
das = the
Buch = book

Ich = I
habe = have
ein = a
Buch = book

German is a different form of English in terms of the order of words in a sentence.
In English, "I see the book" - the subject is first, the verb is second, and the object is third.

In German, you can say "I see the book" OR "the book see I." 
You can say it either way.

I see the book = Ich sehe das Buch
Referring to our Yoda impression, "the book see I," is translated into "Das Buch sehe Ich."

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ANOTHER EXAMPLE:

Ich sehe das Fenster.

That new word means window.
Remember, Fenster = window.
Now, refer back to our key words and translate them into that sentence given.

The English translation of the sentence is "I see the window."

The subject in the sentence is "I" since that is the person doing the action.
The object in the sentence is "window" since it is being affected by the action.

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ANOTHER EXAMPLE:

Der Mann siht die Frau.

Der Mann = the man
Die Frau = the women
Sehe and sieht = to see

English translation is "The man sees the woman."
Die and Der means "the" when placed in front of a word. So, technically, the German word for man is mann and the German word for women is frau. 

ALTHOUGH, der and die also mean different things. Der can mean masculine (put in front of man), and die can mean feminine (put in front of woman). One that we did not include was das, which can mean neutral. 
So basically, der, das, and die are all gender forms in German. 

Remember, the subject is nominative and the accusative is the object.
The man would be the subject and the woman would be the object.

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ANOTHER EXAMPLE:

Wir folgen den Zug.

This translates to: We follow the train.

Wir = we
folgen = follow
den = the
Zug = train

NOW, the dativ of this sentence is the indirect object and is the RECEIVER of the direct object. 'Receiver' is a significant word so you can identify it easier. 

So, the dativ in this sentence is 'the train', since they are /following/ the train. What are they doing? They are FOLLOWING the train. Following is also an important word to identify a dativ.

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I'm a bit rubbish on my German, but hopefully this helps you somewhat.

Answer:

Wow this is a very old question.

Explanation:

Is this German sentence correct? Heute ist meine Stadt äußerst laut und gibt es keinen Flughafen. gibt es or es gibt? Any other errors let me know...

Answers

Answer:

it is right

Explanation:

Music videos gave pop musicians a visible presence that helped them sell more music.Question 18 options:

1) True
2) False

Answers

This is most likely true because the videos (nine times out of ten) let the viewer really connect to the song and know  what it is really about.
the answer is true i hope this helps

What is the difference between "Herr" and "Herrn"?

Answers

Herr, in German, means mister, sir, gentleman, or in elevated cases, lord or master.

It's important to realize something about German: cases.
There are four different cases in German, and they are:
nominative - when something acts as a subject
(the person doing the action)
accusative - when something acts as a direct object
(the thing the action happens to)
dative - when something acts as an indirect object
(like accusative but preceded by to, at, in, etc.)
genitive - when something acts as possessing something.
(the person to whom something belongs)

Here's a sample sentence.
He came into the garage and stole John's bike.
The subject, he, is nominative.
The direct object, the bike, is accusative.
The indirect object, the garage, is dative.
The person possessing something, John, is in the genitive.

In English, cases don't matter very much.
However, in German they are extremely important.
German cases even change how to write and say words.
(This is called declension.)

Herr will appear as Herrn because of its declension.
In the nominative, it's Herr.
In any other case, it's Herrn. (i.e., when it's acting as the object of a sentence)
When it's plural, it's always Herren.



Herr, in German, means mister, sir, gentleman, or in elevated cases, lord or master.

What does the words mean?

It's important to realize something about German: cases.

There are four different cases in German, and they are:

nominative - when something acts as a subject (the person doing the action)

accusative - when something acts as a direct object

(the thing the action happens to)

dative - when something acts as an indirect object(like accusative but preceded by to, at, in, etc.)

genitive - when something acts as possessing something. 8the person to whom something belongs)

Leaen more about Germany

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