Difficulty: Beginner
Germany
Pigs, cherries, and bears: Yabla's own Eva explains the meanings of a number of German expressions.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Germany
After a good night's sleep and a delicious breakfast, Brigitta's friends want to take her out to see their neighborhood. They hope that they can even convince her to move there.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Germany
After picking her up from the train station, the two roommates are very excited to show Brigitta their apartment. She is impressed, but also very tired from traveling.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Germany
Julia and Marie have recently moved to Berlin and are waiting for their friend Brigitta to arrive for a visit.
Difficulty: Beginner
Germany South German
This installment of questions from the German citizenship test covers issues from maternity protection to the treaties that have defined German history.
Difficulty: Beginner
Germany
Barbara and her students look at a few more sentences that each have a nominative subject and a dative object.
Difficulty: 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: 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: Beginner
Germany
Barbara introduces sentences that only include the nominative and dative, particularly sentences with the verbs gefallen and schmecken.
Difficulty: Beginner
Germany
Eva goes over the various colors in German and the words used to describe shades and hues.
Difficulty: Beginner
Germany
Eva talks about the various traditions associated with the celebration of Easter in Germany.
Difficulty: Beginner
Germany
Jenny answers more questions from the German Citizenship test, this time focusing on the end of World War II and the occupation of Germany.
Difficulty: Beginner
Germany
After traveling back in time to fix her mistake, Frau Hoffmann also takes steps to reduce her workload so that she will avoid being overwhelmed by her job in the near future.
Difficulty: Beginner
Germany
Frau Hoffmann gets fired and suspects that it is because of the mistake she made the previous week. And what is her best hope for fixing the situation? A time machine!
Difficulty: Intermediate
Germany Upper Saxon
Melanie Schmidt makes a call to try to get to the bottom of the issues behind a new advertising campaign. It seems that both companies involved are experiencing problems.
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