| bio | website | stackoverflow.com/users/… |
|---|---|---|
| location | Europe | |
| age | 23 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 11 months |
| seen | Sep 9 '12 at 14:53 | |
| stats | profile views | 5 |
Eins, zwei, guten Morgen!
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Apr 11 |
revised |
Does “dürfen” + other negatives imply the same thing as “dürfen nicht”? Replaced <i> tags with <em> tags to make it more generalized. |
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Apr 11 |
suggested | suggested edit on Does “dürfen” + other negatives imply the same thing as “dürfen nicht”? |
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Apr 11 |
awarded | Critic |
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Apr 11 |
comment |
Does “dürfen” + other negatives imply the same thing as “dürfen nicht”?may not is prohibitive, it means that one is not allowed to do something, you seem to confuse it with might not |
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Mar 13 |
comment |
What are differences between “ins” and “in”? @Feroc: "ins" is always referring to a specific instance, if it really did not matter you would use "in ein" instead. It seems to me that the lacking use of "in das" in many cases just makes it sound awkward while it should really be equivalent by definition. |
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Mar 12 |
revised |
What to say after someone sneezes? Unbutchered the link |
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Mar 12 |
suggested | suggested edit on What to say after someone sneezes? |
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Mar 12 |
comment |
What are differences between “ins” and “in”? @HendrikVogt: Just because noone actually says that it is not wrong to use the expanded form. |
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Jan 14 |
awarded | Editor |
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Jan 14 |
revised |
Is it acceptable to omit umlauts and put an extra 'e' instead? edited body |
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Jun 26 |
comment |
Eifersucht vs. Neid @Hendrik Vogt: Neidig is certainly not plain wrong, it has been or is used in Bavaria, it's dialect of course. |
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Jun 25 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Jun 1 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Jun 1 |
answered | Is it acceptable to omit umlauts and put an extra 'e' instead? |
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May 31 |
awarded | Autobiographer |