Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara and her students in Tübingen build sentences with direct objects, reviewing the accusative as well as the difference between definite and indefinite articles.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara helps her students understand that there are many ways to say the articles "the" and "a" in German, and you have to know when to use which one.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara teaches her students how to use the accusative case correctly.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara explains how to create sentences with verbs that require the use of nominative, dative, and accusative cases.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara teaches her students about constructing sentences with both the accusative and dative, and how the noun endings are altered.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
In the third part of this video, Barbara provides more verbs for the students to work with. They form sentences using the accusative and dative, trying not to forget the appropriate declensions. Tip: to more clearly understand the difference between bieten and anbieten, both commonly translated as "to offer," see this Yabla German Lesson.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
The last part of Barbara's lesson on sentence construction with the nominative, dative, and accusative.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara introduces sentences that only include the nominative and dative, particularly sentences with the verbs gefallen and schmecken.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
In the second video about the third category of verbs, Barbara takes the class through verbs such as danken and passen, which require the nominative and the dative.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara takes her students through some verbs with complicated structures, such as "fehlen" and "gehören." Luckily, Macy and Cramer are able to act out some of these to help their fellow students.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara and her students look at a few more sentences that each have a nominative subject and a dative object.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Barbara plays a game with her students to practice the accusative case.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Diane and Jasmin explain the six German interrogative (question) words: who, what, when, why, how and where to.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Yabla's own Diane reviews which prepositions are used when, and what case they require of the noun that follows.
Difficulty:
Adv Beginner
Germany
Katharina’s not having a great night out on the town: The bartender keeps getting her order wrong – on purpose? – and her friend Stephan is somehow unable to find the venue. A bizarre evening indeed!
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