hey ,if anyone else is searching for learn simple German phrases try Corbandy Learn German Crusher (should be on google have a look ) ? Ive heard some pretty good things about it and my co-worker got amazing results with it.
Hello from Brazil, Jenny! Thanks for the great videos! I really appreciate them. I would like to say, videos like this one are the best for me, watching it over and over, I can improve my german a lot faster! Dankeschoen!
Im Winter: short for in dem Winter. (In THE winter). With a normal noun German require the article. In Deutschland: proper nouns require no article, so that is just in.
IN min 1:03 The sentence literally means "In Winter, I like to drink something called Getranke" ?? Cause All I know is that heise means called so could u explain that plz.
hallo jenny wie geht es ihnen? ich mag ihre videos das ist sehr wunderbar ich habe eine frage can you pls tell me, in speaking how can anyone understand where tou use akkusative nominative dative and genetiv pls reply
hi Jenny. I was wondering why we are using "es" at these sentences. We already have the subject. "Draussen ist es kalt" , "Drinnen ist es warm" for my logic, it should have been like this "Draussen ist kalt" , "Drinnen ist warm" by the way, thank you for teaching us German.
Usually this word has two syllables: zu-sehen (like "zu-sehn"). In careful speech, though, it's actually got three syllables: zu-seh-en. Hope this helps :-)
@Learn German with Jenny After listening to the video the goal is that I have a general understanding of what you meant without translation right? I think I have achieved this but I have a question! When Do you place the pronoun first like Ich lernen Deutsch and when do you put the verb first like a lot of the sentences u said in this video. Danke
Hello Jenny, In your previous video you explained that name of the seasons will always have masculine article "Der". can you explain the reason behind using "Den Sommer" in this video!
Thank you for your nice lesson. why the sentence "Dinnen ist warm" is incorrect? and in the sentence "Dinnen ist es warm", what is the role of "es" ? Thank you.
The verb is always in the second position. In English it would be "Inside it is warm." But in Deutsch you need the verb to come second so it is literally "Inside is it warm." (You can remember this because if you make a V with your index & middle finger it also makes a #2 in American English.) The verb isn't always literally the second word. If you have a Noun with an article before it, they stay together as a unit. Then the verb comes after them, like in "Die Heizung ist an". You keep the article and the noun together, and put the verb in the second position. Hope this helps answer your question.
The point is that in German, every sentence needs a grammatical subject. In this case, there's no semantic subject, therefore we have to use "es" as kind of a placeholder :-)
Hello Jen I appreciate your tutorials (sorry) but the music in the end so annoying you can add another advertisement instead of it Please provide us more tutorials like this I'm enjoying a lot learning with you😊😇
When a word is the beginning of the sentence that is not the subject, the verb and the subject's positions change and the take the position of each other.
On number 30 now! Great video Jenny. Question please: why is the verb before the pronoun (like with a question) for: Im Winter trinke ich gerne heisse Getraenke (trinke ich / ich trinke)... and for: In Deutschland ist es sehr kalt (ist es /es ist)? Danke!
I’m p sure it’s because of that 😅 In German the verbs (in this case ‘ist’) comes in the second position, so since in the example ‘Drinnen’ came first, you switch the positions and instead of saying ‘es ist’, you say ‘ist es’ Idk how to explain, but basically: Drinnen (1st position) ist (2nd position) es kalt. But if you were to remove ‘drinnen’, then it would be: Es (1st position) ist (2nd position) kalt. So, basically, whenever you’re forming the phrase, the verb must come in the second position. Idk if I explained this well
its correct to say "Ich habe ..." right ? but you said "Im winter habe ich ...." why the verb has changed its position here cant we also say "Im winter ich habe...." ? and usage of "nicht" i thought it comes after verbs like "Ich mag nicht ..." but you said "Ich mag den Winter nicht." so this time its at the end of the sentence, is there any reason or just german things ? Danke schön.
Helooo jenny i really liled the way you teach uss you helped me a lot but i want to buy a book wrriten by you if you have und vielen dank für dir tschüss
mögen is usually used with nouns and gerne with verbs Ich mag Schokolade - I like chocolate Ich esse gerne Schokolade - I like to eat chocolate. Ich mag Hunde - I like dogs. Ich gehe gerne mit meinem Hund spazieren - I like to walk my dog.
I have been studying foreign languages teaching methods and I ended up learning a bit of German in the process. Right now, I don't feel like dabbling in German much further, because I wouldn't have many real opportunities to use it. But I'm wondering about going for a certificate just for the fun, since I already learned quite a lot for someone without that goal in mind. For what I read in the CEFR and seen in videos of yours and from other people, I feel very confident for the A1, but not quite for the A2. So as a suggestion, if it isn't too much trouble, perhaps you could make a video about the A2 exam, speaking generally about how the competencies are measured in practice, just like you already had for the A1 and also speaking a bit about the writing part of the exam. Also, just out of curiosity, in those videos you said you work with translation and speak several languages (5 in the first video and 3 in the second). So, what languages do you work with? If I were to guess, I would say English and French because most translators and interpreters choose 1 or 2 foreign languages.
Hi Alex, Yeah I can definitely make a video on the a2 exam but it would take me some time to prepare. But it's a good idea and it would probably me helpful to quite a few people. I speak English which I learned when I was a child because I lived in Michigan for 3 years. I leaned French in school for 7 years and then went to live in France for a year. Then I went to Argentina for 3 years to learn Spanish and in Argentina I also started learning Brazilian Portuguese and I learned it rather quickly because it's similar to Spanish and I have some friends from Brazil I could practice with. That's my story in a nutshell. I'm trying to learn Russian now but I feel like it's going to take me 10 years 😄
+German with Jenny Ein A2 Prufung wird fur mich sehr hilfreich sein. Ich glaube dass ich die A2 Schritt sein. Danke fur alles was Sie tun fur uns. Tschüss
Learn German with Jenny Russian is hard even for Russians themselves, especially writing... I'm learning German because I moved to Switzerland and I find it very challenging. However, I am able to make some parallels with Russian because we also have cases. I can't imagine how the English native speakers must struggle with it! Anyways thanks for your videos Jenny, I find them really helpful!
I've just seen a couple of your videos and totally love your way of teaching. You're doing a great job!
+German Hernandez I'm glad you like them :) Thanks for stopping by!
hey ,if anyone else is searching for learn simple German phrases try Corbandy Learn German Crusher (should be on google have a look ) ? Ive heard some pretty good things about it and my co-worker got amazing results with it.
This is crazy. I am learning german from few days now and I understood everything you said
I thoroughly enjoyed the whole conversation and was amazed that I could understand everything she was saying. Credit goes to Jenny SAMA 🙏
Jenny I started studying German last year, but I had to stoped, but now I'm back again, your classes are very pleaseant to watch.
I am learning German from few days and now and I understood everything you said. I love your way of teaching
Feels very gratifying to understand most of what you said. Vielen Dank!
Hello from Brazil, Jenny!
Thanks for the great videos! I really appreciate them. I would like to say, videos like this one are the best for me, watching it over and over, I can improve my german a lot faster!
Dankeschoen!
hello Jenny could you please tell me how you memorize new vocabulary for new language ,as you mentioned you can speak 5 language,thanks a lot
Thank you Jenny, Your videos are amazing. All my admiration for you
Ich trinke gerne auch tea. You are such a wonderful teacher. Danke schon
I have been searching a lot of listening courses for beginner in Deutsch, but guess this is the best! God bless you!
Du bist super 😍 ich lerne Deutsch bei dir😍❤️❤️ Dankeschön
1:08 Im Winter
1:14 In Deutschland, so we can use English word 'In' in german also?
Or is there a typo?
Im Winter: short for in dem Winter. (In THE winter). With a normal noun German require the article.
In Deutschland: proper nouns require no article, so that is just in.
@@joethompson6960 Danke Joe
Im= in dem
Helpful for beginners trying to nail pronunciation. Danke!
This is when I realize how "advanced" my English is! Lol. I'm gonna have to be patient here. I love German.
and 3:14 whats the difference between zusehen and zuschauen? or are they interchangeable?
Dankeschön for being so good at explaining
dankeschön ms. Jenny for all videos.
are articles always a must? for example at 1:59, would it be wrong to just say ich mag winter nicht, or ich mag nicht winter?
you need to use an article
Ich mag den Winter.
Ich mag den Winter nicht.
please make more videos for the beginners
thanks a lot
I understood a lot of it. Feels so good!
The pronunciation of Ski caught me off guard
Me too!
so no sound of 'k'?
Ich finde diese Übung sehr hilfreich!!!
Hi Jenny,
Could you put more videos in the playlists of A1 and A2? Thank you.
The place of the nicht why is last there is any rule?
+Amit Singh th-cam.com/video/ynPiiIDjgcg/w-d-xo.html
Dankeshon Jenny for helping me lerne Deutsch! 💙
Dankeschon dear Jenny
Dankeschön! I could understand almost 90%.
IN min 1:03 The sentence literally means "In Winter, I like to drink something called Getranke" ?? Cause All I know is that heise means called so could u explain that plz.
heiße Getränke - hot drinks :)
@Learn German with Jenny Does that mean that "heiße " has both meanings "called" and "hot"
@@mohabarafa7369 Exactly
Hi Jenny, why is the "is before the it" in 1:12?
Maybe a few months late, but it's just because the "is" must be placed between the subject "es" and the place "In Deustchland"
Ich finde, dass das ist super 💯
I'm lost again. I just cant get the word placement. Which video was that one again? I need to rewatch it :(
Hallo Jenny. Schönes Wochenende!
When do you use ´to be´before subject? (Drinnen ist es warm, Im Winter fahre ich Ski, etc.)
Can we also say " ich habe kalte Finger im Winter" ? is there any difference between these sentences ?
hallo jenny
wie geht es ihnen?
ich mag ihre videos
das ist sehr wunderbar
ich habe eine frage
can you pls tell me, in speaking how can anyone understand where tou use akkusative nominative dative and genetiv
pls reply
hi Jenny. I was wondering why we are using "es" at these sentences. We already have the subject.
"Draussen ist es kalt" , "Drinnen ist es warm"
for my logic, it should have been like this "Draussen ist kalt" , "Drinnen ist warm"
by the way, thank you for teaching us German.
I think she means to say:
"Inside, it is warm"
"Outside, it is cold"
Danke schön für dieses Video
Danke ,Jenny
one question : Zusehen is 2 or three syllables : is it zu-se-hen or just zu-sen
Usually this word has two syllables: zu-sehen (like "zu-sehn"). In careful speech, though, it's actually got three syllables: zu-seh-en. Hope this helps :-)
@Learn German with Jenny After listening to the video the goal is that I have a general understanding of what you meant without translation right? I think I have achieved this but I have a question! When Do you place the pronoun first like Ich lernen Deutsch and when do you put the verb first like a lot of the sentences u said in this video. Danke
The rule is: in indicative sentences the verb is always at the second position ;-)
Hello Jenny,
In your previous video you explained that name of the seasons will always have masculine article "Der".
can you explain the reason behind using "Den Sommer" in this video!
+Pagol Poka check out my videos about the Accusative Case please. "Den" is Accusative
One uses "Den Sommer" when you are referring to summer as an object and not the subject, as in the case of accusative.
Akkusativ
Vielen dank!
hello :)
is it correct to say "ich mag kaffe trinken?"
i've only started learning german, so it's just a guess.
+Ifrah Bilal when talking about an activity, you should use "gern"
Ich trinke gern Kaffee
Learn German with Jenny thabk you!!
Hallo, in Ski, there is no sound of 'k'. Ist es richtig?
Wishing you a nice winter. 😉Is it den winter or der winter?🤔
Thank you for your nice lesson.
why the sentence "Dinnen ist warm" is incorrect?
and in the sentence "Dinnen ist es warm", what is the role of "es" ?
Thank you.
The verb is always in the second position. In English it would be "Inside it is warm." But in Deutsch you need the verb to come second so it is literally "Inside is it warm." (You can remember this because if you make a V with your index & middle finger it also makes a #2 in American English.)
The verb isn't always literally the second word. If you have a Noun with an article before it, they stay together as a unit. Then the verb comes after them, like in "Die Heizung ist an". You keep the article and the noun together, and put the verb in the second position.
Hope this helps answer your question.
The point is that in German, every sentence needs a grammatical subject. In this case, there's no semantic subject, therefore we have to use "es" as kind of a placeholder :-)
Hello Jen I appreciate your tutorials (sorry) but the music in the end so annoying you can add another advertisement instead of it
Please provide us more tutorials like this I'm enjoying a lot learning with you😊😇
+Salwa Nielsy the new videos don't have it
The melody is nice and fresh.
Hi Jenny,
"It is " is translated differently in the sentence "In Deutschland ist es sehr kalt. Es ist Januar .
Please tell the rule behind it.
Niaz Maksud th-cam.com/video/qihFkBjwuxk/w-d-xo.html this might help, if you’re wondering why the verb changed positions
@@sturmlex Thanks. Will look Into the video.
When a word is the beginning of the sentence that is not the subject, the verb and the subject's positions change and the take the position of each other.
1:27 Why is "ist es" and not "es ist" ???
The conjugated verb is always the second sentence element in indicative statements.
Hi jenny. In this exm:sie geht zu fuß.why do not put 'zum ' .(fuß take der)?
On number 30 now! Great video Jenny. Question please: why is the verb before the pronoun (like with a question) for: Im Winter trinke ich gerne heisse Getraenke (trinke ich / ich trinke)... and for: In Deutschland ist es sehr kalt (ist es /es ist)? Danke!
Wait? You pronunce "ski" "schee" in German? @3:07
Yes
Why "es" after "ist" 2:39?
I believe it's because verbs always comes in the second position (:
@@sturmlex i wish someone answer me
I’m p sure it’s because of that 😅
In German the verbs (in this case ‘ist’) comes in the second position, so since in the example ‘Drinnen’ came first, you switch the positions and instead of saying ‘es ist’, you say ‘ist es’
Idk how to explain, but basically:
Drinnen (1st position) ist (2nd position) es kalt.
But if you were to remove ‘drinnen’, then it would be:
Es (1st position) ist (2nd position) kalt.
So, basically, whenever you’re forming the phrase, the verb must come in the second position.
Idk if I explained this well
Here, this video explains that a lot better: th-cam.com/video/qihFkBjwuxk/w-d-xo.html
@@sturmlex thank you^.^
its correct to say "Ich habe ..." right ? but you said "Im winter habe ich ...." why the verb has changed its position here cant we also say "Im winter ich habe...." ?
and usage of "nicht" i thought it comes after verbs like "Ich mag nicht ..." but you said "Ich mag den Winter nicht." so this time its at the end of the sentence, is there any reason or just german things ?
Danke schön.
+Outplayed this video will help you : th-cam.com/video/pqnYBp5dmYo/w-d-xo.html
+Outplayed and this one too th-cam.com/video/ynPiiIDjgcg/w-d-xo.html
Danke schön Jenny.
Helooo jenny i really liled the way you teach uss you helped me a lot but i want to buy a book wrriten by you if you have und vielen dank für dir tschüss
When do you say Mag = Like and Gerne = Like ?
mögen is usually used with nouns and gerne with verbs
Ich mag Schokolade - I like chocolate
Ich esse gerne Schokolade - I like to eat chocolate.
Ich mag Hunde - I like dogs.
Ich gehe gerne mit meinem Hund spazieren - I like to walk my dog.
+German with Jenny wonderful.. Thank you for the very helpful videos.. keep it coming.
Es ist perfekt!
Ski means what
könnten Sie bitte (fürs) erklären ? Vielen Dank
Can any of you guy tell me the name of the ending song in this video ?
My brother hates it
Danke
Why didn't you say" Draußen ist kalt" ?
I have been studying foreign languages teaching methods and I ended up learning a bit of German in the process. Right now, I don't feel like dabbling in German much further, because I wouldn't have many real opportunities to use it. But I'm wondering about going for a certificate just for the fun, since I already learned quite a lot for someone without that goal in mind. For what I read in the CEFR and seen in videos of yours and from other people, I feel very confident for the A1, but not quite for the A2.
So as a suggestion, if it isn't too much trouble, perhaps you could make a video about the A2 exam, speaking generally about how the competencies are measured in practice, just like you already had for the A1 and also speaking a bit about the writing part of the exam.
Also, just out of curiosity, in those videos you said you work with translation and speak several languages (5 in the first video and 3 in the second). So, what languages do you work with? If I were to guess, I would say English and French because most translators and interpreters choose 1 or 2 foreign languages.
Hi Alex,
Yeah I can definitely make a video on the a2 exam but it would take me some time to prepare. But it's a good idea and it would probably me helpful to quite a few people.
I speak English which I learned when I was a child because I lived in Michigan for 3 years. I leaned French in school for 7 years and then went to live in France for a year. Then I went to Argentina for 3 years to learn Spanish and in Argentina I also started learning Brazilian Portuguese and I learned it rather quickly because it's similar to Spanish and I have some friends from Brazil I could practice with. That's my story in a nutshell.
I'm trying to learn Russian now but I feel like it's going to take me 10 years 😄
+German with Jenny Thank you for sharing your story, you seem like a really nice person. Take how long you need, after all it's just a suggestion.
+German with Jenny Ein A2 Prufung wird fur mich sehr hilfreich sein. Ich glaube dass ich die A2 Schritt sein. Danke fur alles was Sie tun fur uns. Tschüss
Me encantan tus videos, son realmente perfectos para entender este idioma tan complejo! Un millon de gracias! Te escribo desde venezuela!
Learn German with Jenny Russian is hard even for Russians themselves, especially writing... I'm learning German because I moved to Switzerland and I find it very challenging. However, I am able to make some parallels with Russian because we also have cases. I can't imagine how the English native speakers must struggle with it!
Anyways thanks for your videos Jenny, I find them really helpful!
Nice
Dankeschön
fur and furs?? what's the difference~?
+Beatriz Riboredo für = (for); für das = fürs (for the)
oh, dankeschön.. Brazilian here :p
I love your videos, i'm trying to learn German, cuz my language is totally different rs Thank u
That's really nixes to hear! Glad my videos are of some help 😊
Hi Jenny! Thanks for you videos they are very useful :) Why is it "kalte Füße" and not "kalten Füße"? Thanks ;)
F
good
Ich trinke gerne Kaffee ohne Milch und Zucker ! Und ich mag den Winter in Los Angeles, weil es 25 Grad im Winter ist !
Continueeee
Ich mag den winter und sommer
Ich mag den Sommer.
Ich mag den winter
May i know why you are using "den winter, den sommer" instead of "der winter, der sommer"
Because it's the accusative case. When a noun is the object in the sentence you use accusative case, so the article changes; only in masculine though.
Bis bald tschus!
Kalte füße ist auch vor Hochzeit
❤👑
any one from 2020?
ich trinke Kaffee mit Milch und сука
*Zucker
lmao
Ich gehe auch gerne Ski
❤️❤️❤️
Du bist sehr schön
Im Winter habe ich kalt Finger
Shouldn't this be - Im Winter ich habe kalt Finger
Arjun Wadhawan no, the verb comes always in second place. The way she said is correct.
NEIN
CAFFE
Plz don repeat everything
It’s to irritating