Veilguard Appreciation Week Day 3 - Hope / Hossberg Wetlands
Evka and Antoine are definitely among my all-time fav NPCs.
@veilguard-appreciation-week

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Veilguard Appreciation Week Day 3 - Hope / Hossberg Wetlands
Evka and Antoine are definitely among my all-time fav NPCs.
@veilguard-appreciation-week
Tohle, moje lásky.... tohle je proč je tak důležité učit se dativ.
Rodzil mezi 'si' a 'se' není jedno. Naše mrkvový čech je teď MOC znepokojený.
DE - EN
angewöhnen Akk - to break (a habit)
angewöhnen Akk - to get used to sth.
angehören - to be a member of
anvertrauen Akk - to confine
auffallen - to catch so.’s eyes
befehlen - to comand
beibringen Akk - to teach
beitreten - to join
bekommen (3.P) - to do good/bad
dienen - to conduce
entnehmen Akk - to infer
entsprechen - to correspond
entziehen Akk - to take sth. from so.
ermöglichen Akk - to afford sth. so.
fehlen - to lack/ to miss
gegenüberstehen - to be alongside sth.
gleichen - to equal/ to resemble
hinzufügen Akk - to add sth.
leidtun - to feel sorry
passen (3.P) - sth. is convenient for so.
schulden Akk - to owe so. sth. (e.g. money)
überlassen Akk - to loan so. sth.
unterliegen - to be subject to sth.
verdanken Akk - to owe so. sth. (e.g. one’s life)
(ver)trauen - to trust
vorenthalten Akk - to deprive so. of sth.
widersprechen - to contradict
zuordnen Akk - to associate/ to assign
zutrauen Akk - to dare to do sth.
s. zuwenden - to turn towards sth.
es geht gut - to do well
More attacc for @parziivale!!! Longest revenge chain I’ve ever had, and I love it~!
Series: Dirty Syntax
Dativ vs. Genitiv
Source: https://twitter.com/dudenverlag/status/963088801861193729?s=21
I‘m the anon who asked about the dativ and akkusativ. I‘m the one writing the sentence :)
I hope this helps, but that’s a pretty tricky question.
Akkusativ = the direct object
Dativ = the indirect object
So for example, we have this sentence: Peter hands Joey the apple. What’s he giving? The apple (Akk). Who is he giving it to? Joey (Dat).
Here’s a handy website for this.
If Peter is putting the apple on the table, then the table is akkusativ. (Peter liegt der Apfel auf den Tisch) But if the apple is already on the table, then the table becomes dativ (Der Apfel liegt auf dem Tisch).
Here’s a handy website for this as well.
If this didn’t really help, send me what you’re trying to write and we’ll puzzle it out together.
German Grammar
In German, there are three genders which are male, female and neuter. These affect the articles for nouns. In the nominative case, if a noun is male you would say der (the) or ein (a), female die or eine, neuter das or ein. The nominative case is just the subject which would be I, you, he, she, it, they. It is what the sentence focuses on.
e.g. I am a boy / Ich bin ein Junge (all nouns are capitalised)
All of this is in the nominative case because the subject is me, and it is describing what I am so it can't be in a different case. In German, there are four cases: nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive (auf Deutsch: Nominativ, Akkusativ, Dativ, und Genitiv.) I shall talk about this a bit later.
"Rettet dem Dativ" auf dem Schild der Stadt #Lingen (Ems) an ihren Einfallstraßen. Aber wer findet den zweiten Schreibfehler der städtischen Experten unter 17 Wörtern (+ einem Logo)?