| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 11 months |
| seen | May 3 at 9:13 | |
| stats | profile views | 34 |
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Nov 5 |
revised |
Are commas not always used in German? Added translation |
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Nov 5 |
revised |
Are commas not always used in German? added 11 characters in body |
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Nov 5 |
answered | Are commas not always used in German? |
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Nov 3 |
comment |
Was “haut man in die Fresse”? @ Olaf: ich würde vorschlagen, dass du deinen Kommentar in eine Antwort umwandelst. |
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Nov 3 |
comment |
Was “haut man in die Fresse”? @ Olaf: ja, ich bin ganz deiner Meinung. Das Problem der weiblichen Form des Zahlwortes bleibt ungelöst. |
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Nov 3 |
asked | Was “haut man in die Fresse”? |
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Oct 28 |
comment |
Erklärung der Beugung des Wortes „Erlenkönig“ im Gedicht Goethes Danke für diese zusätliche Erklärung, Hubert. |
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Oct 28 |
comment |
Erklärung der Beugung des Wortes „Erlenkönig“ im Gedicht Goethes Sehr interessant. Hättest Du vielleicht eine Quellenabgabe für den jüdischen Mythos auf den der Elfenkönig zurückgeht? |
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Jul 4 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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May 31 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Jan 12 |
revised |
Gibt es Steigerungsformen für falsch und richtig? deleted 1 characters in body |
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Jan 12 |
answered | Gibt es Steigerungsformen für falsch und richtig? |
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Jan 11 |
comment |
Beschreibung extremer Langsamkeit "Beamtenmikado" (und die Erklärung dazu) sind fantastisch ! Ist es eine gebräuchliche Redewendung ? |
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Jan 9 |
comment |
Using “nen” instead of “einen” Dear Gigli, once more this is not meant for you. It's just some recurring rant I'm delivering at the slightest pretext! |
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Jan 9 |
comment |
Using “nen” instead of “einen” Dear Gigli, my advice: if you are not a native speaker never use slang or "cute" expressions or abbreviations. Nothing is more ridiculous than foreigners with dreadful syntax, grotesque pronunciation and ultra-limited lexicon trying to sound cool (I'm not implying you do, of course: you is the generic pronoun here!). If you want to impress people, use standard grammar, pronounce words correctly and enrich your active vocabulary. |
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Jan 6 |
revised |
Does using the pronouns “sie” and “er” when refering to objects sound odd to native German speakers? Added "Edit" |
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Jan 6 |
comment |
Does using the pronouns “sie” and “er” when refering to objects sound odd to native German speakers? Ach ja, @user unknown, Du hast Recht: die +1 ist jetzt verwirklicht! |
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Jan 6 |
comment |
Does using the pronouns “sie” and “er” when refering to objects sound odd to native German speakers? Lieber @user unknown, mein Wörterbuch gibt Rosé (Wein) und rosa (Farbe) an, aber man soll nicht zu pingelig sein und dein Beispiel ist recht amüsant: +1 |
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Jan 6 |
revised |
Does using the pronouns “sie” and “er” when refering to objects sound odd to native German speakers? added 5 characters in body |
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Jan 6 |
answered | Does using the pronouns “sie” and “er” when refering to objects sound odd to native German speakers? |