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- grammar - The difference between mein and meine - German Language . . .
The difference between "mein" and "meine" Ask Question Asked 10 years, 9 months ago Modified 2 years, 11 months ago
- When to use which pronoun declination: mein, meiner, meine, meins, etc
I learned that a pronoun should take an ending in accordance with its gender, case, numerus, etc whenever it refers to some noun in particular — ‘Das Auto ist meins’ for example So in the follow
- How to find out when to use mein or meine? [closed]
Mein Ideal (singular subject) vs Meine Ideale (plural subject) Thus you see, you have to determine the gender or plurality of the subject word in first place (which isn't actually following regular rules in German, and you just need to memorize the irregularities) to decide, if you use mein or meine for each particular case
- Ist die Form »mein Gutster« akzeptabel im Hochdeutschen?
Ist die Form mein Gutster als liebevolle Anrede akzeptabel und korrekt auch in der hochdeutschen Sprache? Hier in Dresden habe ich das ziemlich oft so gehört
- Meaning of mein Lieber - German Language Stack Exchange
Actually, “mein Lieber” is very rarely used to address someone, with the possible exception of the use mentioned in Thorsten's answer So maybe you want to check where you encountered the word and expand your question The phrases “lieber xxx” and “mein lieber xxx” are different from this
- Meine vs mein Leibchen - German Language Stack Exchange
The ending "-chen" indicates that "Liebchen" is a diminutive All diminutives are grammatically neuter in German, so it must be "mein Liebchen" (using the neuter form "mein") no matter whether it's said to a man or to a woman ("mein" is masculine or neuter, "meine" is feminine)
- Does Jawohl carry Nazi connotations? - German Language Stack Exchange
Would answering "Jawohl" to an order or request be associated with Nazi Germany? What about "Jawohl, mein Kommandant"? Can it be used (jokingly) without people finding it tasteless?
- Which grammatical gender would I use for a masculine noun with . . .
Given that "Schatz" is a masculine word, I would use masculine modifiers with it, such as "der" But suppose I were using "Schatz" to refer to a woman I was dating Would I then refer to "mein Sc
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