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ingo
Very good for the beginning :king:

Some other useful words or sentences:

- "Autoverwertung" : car salvage

- "Möchtest du einen Kaffee mit mir trinken?" : Do you want to drink a coffee with me?
In the late evening, if you say it to a girl (or a girl to you), it has annother meaning than during the day :wink:

- "geil" means originally "horny", but it always used by younger people in the meaning of "hot" or "great"

- "Was kostet das?" : "How much is it?"

- "Ich hätte gerne...." : I would like to have...

- "Verpiss Dich!" - "Piss off!"

And, for sure, there is a bit variety of words or names for, for example:
- being drunk
- for girls (in bad or good meaning
- nasty names


I don't want to irritate you too much, but there are differences in the language, not only the dialect, between the parts of Germany.


To be serious again: it's good to learn other languages in the school, but the only way to learn it really, is the excercising in reality. If you MUST talk, you will make it (if you have learned the foundations before).

So I've been very bad in English in school. Then I made a one-month-school-exchange to Canada - but there I've talked German, too ,because it was a German-Canadian family. Once in the supermarket, they pushed me to the butcher's table and have said "Now order!" - they have loughed, because I've only showed with the finger on the meat and sausages. :smile:
Three years later, I've visited them again. There my friend had to time to trevel with me, so I went alone - and it has worked good!
I was proud as hell, after I could tell -in English- some other tourists in downtown Vancouver their way on the map. And they (I think German or Dutch guys) haven't seen, that I'm a foreigner, too.

Yes, I've learned the most of English by my old-car-hobby later on!
I've helped the guys from other countries with informations and spare-parts. In the last years, especially since I'm in the Internet, nearly daily I'm in contact with people from other countries.
And since I'm active in this forum, surely, I'm using much more English.


Due my hobby I'm also trying to know a bit from other languages. So my French is very bad (only 3 years in school, no excercise in reality). But I've tried to get a log-in for a big French car-forum to get more Francophone informations about my hobby.

Dutch I can understand quite good (reading better than listeng or talking), because a lot of my K 70-friends are from Holland. And -probably our Dutch friends here didn't like to hear that - historicially seen, Dutch is a branch of the ancient North German dialect.

Swedish has the same roots as German and English, so I can read it a bit. Danish and Norwegian are a bit more difficult.

I had 7 years Latin in school (idiotic decision, I should better have chosen French or Spanish), so I can understand single words of Italian or Spanish, but it's not enough to read an news-article.

From Polish, Czech, Hungarian (not to talk about Russian) I cannot understand anything. Perhaps one or two words.
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