The German expression “einen Vogel haben” (literally “to have a bird”) is used to describe a person who is acting crazy: “Du hast doch wohl einen Vogel!” - “You must be insane!” "Du hast nicht mehr alle Tassen im Schrank" means "You are nuts", "You’re gone mad", "You’ve lost your mind"
This is an excellent technique of learning a language. Many thanks but when the written words are being pronounced the speaker speaks them far too quickly. I had to continually go back to try to get the oral expressions. It would be much more helpful for the words to be placed on the screen for more than a fraction of a second and then be slowly enunciated.
0:40 wo man dann ganz schnell draufkommt "wo der Bartl das Moos holt" oder einfach nur "wo's lang geht" --- wie ich vor Ewigkeiten also ca. 25 Jahren nach Wien gekommen bin, hab ich da auch so einiges an unnutzen Wörtern lernen müssen --- gebraucht hab ichs nicht wirklich, weil danach war dann der Migrantenanteil schon zu hoch und in Ottakring habens mich schon mit "Mehrhaber" begrüßt --- oder wars "merhaba" --- egal, noch gibts keine verpflichtenden Türkischkurse
The "verb" wachsen is not regular and the fact that the participle includes a "ge" is not an indicator of the verb being regular. What tells us that a verb is not regular is when its past participle ends in "-en" rather than in the default "-t" and the simple past form is made without the simple past marker "t" that regular verbs use. I was looking for comedy easy enough to understand for beginner levels, and I like your idea, but please take care to give correct explanations. Also, this comedian speaks slowly, which is nice, but his pronounciation is anything but clear. I guess it's not easy to find comedy suitable for learners. Any recommendations would be much appreciated.
I think you might be confusing "regular" vs. "irregular verbs with "verbs with separable prefixes" vs. "inseparable prefixes" (those are the ones that don't use "ge" in the past participle!). However, among verbs with prefixes (separable or not) we find both regular and irregular verbs.
The German expression “einen Vogel haben” (literally “to have a bird”) is used to describe a person who is acting crazy:
“Du hast doch wohl einen Vogel!” - “You must be insane!”
"Du hast nicht mehr alle Tassen im Schrank" means "You are nuts", "You’re gone mad", "You’ve lost your mind"
Thanks
My man! thanks.
Dieses neue lange Videoformat ist ausgezeichnet!!! Vielen Dank!
Beautiful work! Thank you! Do more of standup comedy with german
Nonsone why there is not complete subtitle😢😢
Hey ?
This is an excellent technique of learning a language. Many thanks but when the written words are being pronounced the speaker speaks them far too quickly. I had to continually go back to try to get the oral expressions.
It would be much more helpful for the words to be placed on the screen for more than a fraction of a second and then be slowly enunciated.
Please make more videos like this 🙂
Thanks! More to come, stay tuned!
Vielen Dank für diesen tollen Content!👏🏼
Can u do more videos like this? It's help a lot
Heyyy?
das ist sehr schön content. bitte machen Sie weiter
Ich denke, es ist eine schöne Art, Deutsch zu lernen❤😂🎉
Ich habe es genossen!!
Thanks ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
what are those subtitles, half english half german
How can I get more videos of this comedian? What’s his name?
0:40 wo man dann ganz schnell draufkommt "wo der Bartl das Moos holt" oder einfach nur "wo's lang geht" --- wie ich vor Ewigkeiten also ca. 25 Jahren nach Wien gekommen bin, hab ich da auch so einiges an unnutzen Wörtern lernen müssen --- gebraucht hab ichs nicht wirklich, weil danach war dann der Migrantenanteil schon zu hoch und in Ottakring habens mich schon mit "Mehrhaber" begrüßt --- oder wars "merhaba" --- egal, noch gibts keine verpflichtenden Türkischkurse
How can I get more clips of this comedian? What’s his name?
The "verb" wachsen is not regular and the fact that the participle includes a "ge" is not an indicator of the verb being regular. What tells us that a verb is not regular is when its past participle ends in "-en" rather than in the default "-t" and the simple past form is made without the simple past marker "t" that regular verbs use. I was looking for comedy easy enough to understand for beginner levels, and I like your idea, but please take care to give correct explanations. Also, this comedian speaks slowly, which is nice, but his pronounciation is anything but clear. I guess it's not easy to find comedy suitable for learners. Any recommendations would be much appreciated.
I think you might be confusing "regular" vs. "irregular verbs with "verbs with separable prefixes" vs. "inseparable prefixes" (those are the ones that don't use "ge" in the past participle!). However, among verbs with prefixes (separable or not) we find both regular and irregular verbs.
Hi Eva! Thank you for your feedback, we appreciate it. Let me forward this to the team so they can check. Take care!
Plees add subtitle Indonesia
Please fix the subtitles 😂
Hi
Sehr gut
Ich habe nicht gebenein pdf
Hi! Sorry to hear that! Please see the PDF here: www.fluentu.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Learn-German-with-Comedy-PDF.pdf
where not more videos? FluentU German reactivate yourself please :)
Mistake! It means "Sehr schöner Vogel." Not "Sehr schöne Vogel."
🎯