Ich habe eine Frage über Prepositionen. Zum Beispiele hier, _Ich spiele in meiner Freizeit Klavier_ Warum benutzen wir dativ mit *in* ? *İn* is two way preposition How do we decide here which one to use? Tschüss
@@yigitcan824 If time is expressed with a two-way preposition, you use the dative case. You can use "für" with certain time expressions, however, which would require the accusative case, as it is an accusative preposition.
Watch the video in which I explain why calling these verbs "verbs with fixed prepositions" is problematic: th-cam.com/video/FTYrr4LZRPA/w-d-xo.html Learn more about verbs commonly used with the dative case here: www.germanwithantrim.com/verbs-with-fixed-prepositions-the-dative-case Get a worksheet and answer key to practice these verb and preposition combinations here: www.germanwithantrim.com/product/verbs-with-fixed-prepositions-the-dative-case
Both are perfectly acceptable in that context. I agree, it would be more common to use "goes" and it would be a better translation for the verb "gehen", but to say it is "just plain wrong" is just plain wrong. 😉
As an English native speaker born and raised in the midwestern United States, I have heard and said both. Not sure where you are from, but here (southern Illinois) no one would bat an eye at this phrase either way.
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I am very impressed with your teaching aids and video tricks. It must take lots of work and preparation. Beeindruckend.
Thank You sir, I am glad that I had found you.
I'm glad you found me, too.
Sir is there is any difference bwt gehören zu and zählen zu....
In the usage I have seen, I get the feeling that gehören zu is a part of a whole whereas zählen zu is an object that belongs within a specified group.
Thanks again for sharing your knowledge and making me laugh. Both things are much needed!
Ich habe eine Frage über Prepositionen.
Zum Beispiele hier,
_Ich spiele in meiner Freizeit Klavier_
Warum benutzen wir dativ mit *in* ?
*İn* is two way preposition How do we decide here which one to use?
Tschüss
Time is used with the dative case.
Im Sommer schwimmen wir.
Am Morgen putze ich mir die Zähne.
Time doesn't move. You move around through time.
@@MrLAntrim
All time prepositions in German takes dative case, then?
@@yigitcan824 If time is expressed with a two-way preposition, you use the dative case. You can use "für" with certain time expressions, however, which would require the accusative case, as it is an accusative preposition.
Watch the video in which I explain why calling these verbs "verbs with fixed prepositions" is problematic: th-cam.com/video/FTYrr4LZRPA/w-d-xo.html
Learn more about verbs commonly used with the dative case here: www.germanwithantrim.com/verbs-with-fixed-prepositions-the-dative-case
Get a worksheet and answer key to practice these verb and preposition combinations here: www.germanwithantrim.com/product/verbs-with-fixed-prepositions-the-dative-case
It would be, still goes there. "still comes there is just plain wrong."
Both are perfectly acceptable in that context. I agree, it would be more common to use "goes" and it would be a better translation for the verb "gehen", but to say it is "just plain wrong" is just plain wrong. 😉
@@MrLAntrim I don't know about German but in English it's just plain wrong.
As an English native speaker born and raised in the midwestern United States, I have heard and said both. Not sure where you are from, but here (southern Illinois) no one would bat an eye at this phrase either way.
I dont why i Love you...hihihi..