by News in Slow German
Our Get Up To Speed (G.U.T.S.) course is a fun and innovative course designed to help you solidify the basics, with dialogues, stories, lessons, and quizzes. Our goal here is to start at zero German and then end with the ability to continue as a regular listener of “News in Slow German for Beginners”. We'll start slow and will gradually pick up the pace as we go. In fact, in the first lesson, we promise you… yes, PROMISE you that you will be able to understand an entire paragraph in German through the magic of cognates and learning just two simple verbs. Sounds impossible? See for yourself: https://www.newsinslowgerman.com/series/guts/0/wow/1
Language
🇩🇪
Publishing Since
12/23/2024
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January 3, 2025
<p>First we will cover <strong>die Deklination im Akkusativ</strong> and then we'll explore the <strong>Dativ</strong>. We hope you'll find these so helpful you'll refer to them again and again!</p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">Review the transcript, study the lesson and do the quizzes: <a title= "German for Beginners - Episode 25" href= "https://www.newsinslowgerman.com/series/guts/25/transcript" target="_blank" rel= "noopener">www.newsinslowgerman.com/series/guts/25/transcript</a></span></p>
January 3, 2025
<p>This is one of the most important points in German, and the German language is (in)famous for its endings, so you've likely heard of them already. Here you want to be sure to take small steps and you want to <strong>avoid</strong> trying to learn all the endings in all the cases all at once.</p> <p>It bears repeating to be sure to learn these adjective endings one case at a time.</p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">Review the transcript, study the lesson and do the quizzes: <a title= "German for Beginners - Episode 24" href= "https://www.newsinslowgerman.com/series/guts/24/transcript" target="_blank" rel= "noopener">www.newsinslowgerman.com/series/guts/24/transcript</a></span></p>
January 3, 2025
<p>The word tense or tenses refers to the time that a verb describes. The present tense describes now, today, or currently. The future tense indicates something that will happen later today, tomorrow, or five or 50 years from now.</p> <p class="p1"><span class="s1">Review the transcript, study the lesson and do the quizzes: <a title= "German for Beginners - Episode 23" href= "https://www.newsinslowgerman.com/series/guts/23/transcript" target="_blank" rel= "noopener">www.newsinslowgerman.com/series/guts/23/transcript</a></span></p>
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