More things I will probably not say in German class

Aug 02, 2009 15:12

We have to talk about three things we like (to a formula of different degrees of enjoyment):

Ich dekliniere gerne die Substantive de Angelsachsen. (Thank you, F. Liebermann, for teaching me to spell 'Anglo-Saxons' in German. Bloody Gesetze, how I loathe and yet miss that book...)
Ich lese sehr gerne die mittelalterlichen französischen ( Read more... )

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Comments 6

simon_stylites August 2 2009, 07:13:53 UTC
You've got the "adjective before the noun" thing correct. They always go before the noun when they're simply modifying the noun (it's not like, say, French, where some go before and some go after). They behave differently when they're used predicatively (or whatever the term is, I'm too lazy to look it up) after "is" or similar verbs.

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highlyeccentric August 2 2009, 07:15:45 UTC
Oh, lovely. I adore Germanic languages. Very sensible things.

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simon_stylites August 2 2009, 07:22:11 UTC
Right. Have you checked out the overloaded adjective construction yet? Have you noticed how they make adverbs yet? Have you at least explored the exciting world of separable prefixes?

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highlyeccentric August 2 2009, 07:22:48 UTC
Nope, I don't yet know how to do any of these things!

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highlyeccentric August 2 2009, 08:52:26 UTC
Neither of them are the one I was thinking of, but they could be right... Probably the Roman one. Hmm.

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kishnevi August 3 2009, 04:56:26 UTC
I think Hof--refers to courts as in those places where princes and kings tended to hang out, whereas "courtly love" and associated phrases used "courtly" more in the meaning of "courteous" or "polite". But I've forgotten what the German word for courteous is, if I ever knew it.
And I think what you want is not Roman or Geschichte, but Zahl instead--if I'm thinking of the correct word. It's the one that means "tale" in English.

And you will -joy separable prefixes when you get to them, especially whenever you -load a song from the Internet down- en.

Have I ever told you to read Mark Twain's piece on the "Awful German Language".

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