Take a deeper look at the inseparable prefix verbs on my website: www.germanwithantrim.com/inseparable-prefix-verbs-in-german-(untrennbare-verben)/ Practice your skills with these inseparable prefix verbs with the exercises in my worksheet available as a PDF here: www.germanwithantrim.com/product/inseparable-prefix-verbs-extra-materials/ Download the Lists of Verbs for FREE here: www.germanwithantrim.com/product/inseparable-verb-lists/ I created flashcards on Quizlet for every group of inseparable prefixes listed in this video. You can find them here: quizlet.com/join/KxMVzMsCA
A very long and a very useful lesson. It took me more than two hours to go through it thoroughly. I can't help wondering how many hours you must have spent in making this great video! God bless!
4 ปีที่แล้ว
General comment: Oh, how I once loved teaching myself to read Chaucer‘s English. I also at one time enjoyed trying to learn Latin and Greek. Still love etymology. An understanding of Grimm’s Law and the great vowel shift near the time of the advent of the printing press. All this is helping me learn German. The more I study German the more closely I see the links between English. Some is quite evident, some is veiled, and some quite hidden. Ent- and Emf- are the same, the t morphs to an f, when followed by an f. The same way ad- ford in Latin/English becomes afford. Greek helps me see Tag and day, just as in yester(n)day and gestern. The scribes of the day who must have studied Latin and Greek, had their g‘s and gamma‘s misinterpreted. The symbol for gamma is of course y. Drop the „n“ in gestern, just as we do in Satur(n)day and you get yesterday. This is just the slightly concealed stuff. The more I study German the more I believe, I am reading English, or at least just a variation of some type Middle English. Thank you for all your hard work. I did also notice your beautiful tribute to your son. I hope he learns to love language just as much as you do, or should we actually wish that curse on those that we love. Thanks again!
Oh my goodness, you're an absolutely amazing teacher! I'm gonna watch all of your Deutsch courses now. I'm so excited that I found your channel. So engaging, such excitement about the subject you're teacher, humorous as well. Thank you for all the time and effort you have thus far dedicated and will continue to dedicate! You're incredible! 😃👏🤓❤️
The prefix ge is used to turn an imperfective action into an perfektive action. frieren (to be cold,) and gefrieren (to become frozen) rinnen (to flow slowly) gerinnen (to stop flowing)
here is a weird compliment: i had no interest in learning german before google recommend one of your videos to me. now i'm actually contemplating it kinda seriously.
It's not weird. It's flattering. Someone literally changed your mind set for the better. May I ask, how is your German learning journey? Did you start at all?
Ihr Video war wie immer sehr gut. Wenn Sie ein weiteres Video dazu machen, könnten Sie bitte Wiederholungen einbauen. Vielleicht könnten Sie mit diesen Wörtern eine Geschichte erzählen. Ich würde die Wörter gerne an mehreren Stellen zu beliebigen Zeiten hören. Das würde helfen, zu verdeutlichen, was sie bedeuten und wie man sie verwendet. Danke. Und nochmals danke ich Ihnen für Ihre Bemühungen, uns allen beim Erlernen Ihrer wunderbaren Sprache zu helfen.
You are correct. The past participles are the same for brauchen and gebrauchen (gebraucht). I have deleted the example from the video. Sorry for this error, especially since it was used to draw attention to an issue that confuses learners anyway.
Eine Frage Herr Antrim: Ist das Präfix "hinter" auch ein nicht trennbares (untrennbares) Präfix? [1,2] Beispiele: hinter hinterfragen, hintergehen, hinterlassen, hinterlegen, hinterziehen. Etwas komisch. [2] stellt "be-, emp(f)-, ent-, er-, ge-, miss-, ver-, zer-" als nicht trennbare Präfixe dar, aber es zeigt Beispiele mit "hinter". [1] deutschlernerblog.de/trennbare-verben-trennbar-oder-untrennbar-listen-erklaerungen-beispiele-uebungen/ [2] de.longua.org/nicht.trennbare.verben.liste.php
Take a deeper look at the inseparable prefix verbs on my website: www.germanwithantrim.com/inseparable-prefix-verbs-in-german-(untrennbare-verben)/
Practice your skills with these inseparable prefix verbs with the exercises in my worksheet available as a PDF here: www.germanwithantrim.com/product/inseparable-prefix-verbs-extra-materials/
Download the Lists of Verbs for FREE here: www.germanwithantrim.com/product/inseparable-verb-lists/
I created flashcards on Quizlet for every group of inseparable prefixes listed in this video. You can find them here: quizlet.com/join/KxMVzMsCA
I love you ❤️
A very long and a very useful lesson. It took me more than two hours to go through it thoroughly. I can't help wondering how many hours you must have spent in making this great video! God bless!
General comment: Oh, how I once loved teaching myself to read Chaucer‘s English. I also at one time enjoyed trying to learn Latin and Greek. Still love etymology. An understanding of Grimm’s Law and the great vowel shift near the time of the advent of the printing press. All this is helping me learn German. The more I study German the more closely I see the links between English.
Some is quite evident, some is veiled, and some quite hidden.
Ent- and Emf- are the same, the t morphs to an f, when followed by an f. The same way ad- ford in Latin/English becomes afford.
Greek helps me see Tag and day, just as in yester(n)day and gestern. The scribes of the day who must have studied Latin and Greek, had their g‘s and gamma‘s misinterpreted. The symbol for gamma is of course y.
Drop the „n“ in gestern, just as we do in Satur(n)day and you get yesterday.
This is just the slightly concealed stuff.
The more I study German the more I believe, I am reading English, or at least just a variation of some type Middle English.
Thank you for all your hard work. I did also notice your beautiful tribute to your son. I hope he learns to love language just as much as you do, or should we actually wish that curse on those that we love.
Thanks again!
That's very interesting. I knew some of the stuff, but not all of it. Thank you for sharing.
great jod thank you for sharing
Oh my goodness, you're an absolutely amazing teacher! I'm gonna watch all of your Deutsch courses now. I'm so excited that I found your channel. So engaging, such excitement about the subject you're teacher, humorous as well. Thank you for all the time and effort you have thus far dedicated and will continue to dedicate! You're incredible! 😃👏🤓❤️
Thanks for your efforts I enjoy your lessons
Thank you. You are very kind.
The prefix ge is used to turn an imperfective action into an perfektive action.
frieren (to be cold,) and gefrieren (to become frozen)
rinnen (to flow slowly) gerinnen (to stop flowing)
That was sort of on the slide, but I decided to add it later, so I didn't say it out loud. That one definitely deserved a better explanation.
here is a weird compliment:
i had no interest in learning german before google recommend one of your videos to me. now i'm actually contemplating it kinda seriously.
It's not weird. It's flattering. Someone literally changed your mind set for the better.
May I ask, how is your German learning journey? Did you start at all?
This is the best teacher
Thank you very much, but I'll settle for being "one of the best". There are a lot of fantastic teachers on TH-cam.
@@MrLAntrim ok.
One of them
this channel is real gold;
Ihr Video war wie immer sehr gut. Wenn Sie ein weiteres Video dazu machen, könnten Sie bitte Wiederholungen einbauen. Vielleicht könnten Sie mit diesen Wörtern eine Geschichte erzählen. Ich würde die Wörter gerne an mehreren Stellen zu beliebigen Zeiten hören. Das würde helfen, zu verdeutlichen, was sie bedeuten und wie man sie verwendet. Danke. Und nochmals danke ich Ihnen für Ihre Bemühungen, uns allen beim Erlernen Ihrer wunderbaren Sprache zu helfen.
This channel is gold 🙏 thank you for these lessons
Thank you very much. I'm glad you found them helpful.
You are an excellent teacher
Thank you clearing my doubt almost instantaneously. Be blessed!
thanks for this amazing video
Viele Dank
Du hast gut Lernen.
God bless u und u Familie.
God segne dich 🙏
Danke.
That was helpful thank you
thank you🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿
Bibliothekarin hast du sehr seltsam betont.
Gibt es auch ein Video zu den "two way prefixes" wie zum Beispiel über oder um?
Noch nicht. Vielleicht nach den Videos zu den trennbaren Verben.
15:10...I got the message! 😂
Some corrections need to be made. Others are simply being annoying.
German hero thanks❤
Glad to be of service.
Ganzesten und meisten danke shone
when i see the pre fix list : sfx(bruhh)
but thanks! you are a great teacher
A honest and genuine doubt to be cleared by you please.
Is the past participle of 'gebrauchen' => 'gebraucht' or 'gebrauchen'?
You are correct. The past participles are the same for brauchen and gebrauchen (gebraucht). I have deleted the example from the video. Sorry for this error, especially since it was used to draw attention to an issue that confuses learners anyway.
Eine Frage Herr Antrim:
Ist das Präfix "hinter" auch ein nicht trennbares (untrennbares) Präfix? [1,2]
Beispiele: hinter
hinterfragen, hintergehen, hinterlassen, hinterlegen, hinterziehen.
Etwas komisch. [2] stellt "be-, emp(f)-, ent-, er-, ge-, miss-, ver-, zer-" als nicht trennbare Präfixe dar, aber es zeigt Beispiele mit "hinter".
[1] deutschlernerblog.de/trennbare-verben-trennbar-oder-untrennbar-listen-erklaerungen-beispiele-uebungen/
[2] de.longua.org/nicht.trennbare.verben.liste.php
Ja. Irgendwie habe ich dieses Präfix ausgelassen.
www.dartmouth.edu/~deutsch/Grammatik/Wortbildung/Inseparables.html#hinter
@@MrLAntrim, vielen Dank.
7:38 "I'm thinking about your Mother"
*Herr Antrim shows a fat Hippo*
- No way
You should stick around. I do a lot of "your mom" jokes on this channel. 😀
1:24
20:37 - Achtung: "der Drachen" hat eine andere Bedeutung als "der Drache" (ohne "n"). Siehe: bastiansick.de/kolumnen/abc/drachedrachen/
Das habe ich nicht gewusst. Danke.
Kommst du aus Deutschland?
I know I am very late but, 16:16. Damn, I get you're trying to be 'hip' with the kids. But, let me tell you. It's working, and I enjoy it.