German Essentials For Dummies
By Wendy Foster, Paulina Christensen and Anne Fox
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About this ebook
Learning a new language is a fun and challenging feat for students at every level. Perfect for those just starting out or returning to German after some time away, German Essentials For Dummies focuses on core concepts taught (and tested on!) in a typical introductory German course. From adjectives and adverbs to understanding tenses and asking questions, you'll skip the suffering and score high marks at exam time with the help of German Essentials For Dummies.
Designed for students (and parents) who want the key concepts and a few examples—without the review, ramp-up, and anecdotal content—German Essentials For Dummies is a perfect solution for exam-cramming, homework help, and reference.
- Focuses on everything from grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciations to verb forms and tenses
- Perfect for a refresher or a quick reference
- Aids you in writing assignments, tests, and conversational German
If you have some knowledge of German and want to polish your skills, German Essentials For Dummies focuses on just the core concepts you need to communicate effectively.
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German Essentials For Dummies - Wendy Foster
Introduction
You may be taking a German course in high school or college, or perhaps you’re interested in refreshing your German because you’re planning to spend some time in German-speaking Europe. Using this practical reference book to help you advance your German is a great means of making measurable progress — fast. How? Well, this book offers you straight talk as it leads you through a review of the key material you need to understand the basic level of German.
German Essentials For Dummies provides you easy access to practical information that helps you communicate successfully in German. You find the basic grammar that you encounter in introductory German courses. You see clearly what you need to know in order to express yourself in spoken and written German. This book guides you down the path to conversing with confidence in the kinds of situations you encounter on a daily basis when interacting with German speakers. So get a head start and be ready to speak, write, and travel in Deutschland (in Germany).
About This Book
German Essentials For Dummies gives you straight talk, the nitty-gritty, and just enough detail to see you successfully through any major roadblocks to communicating in German. You find a good balance between important grammar points and useful, communicative language. Without even realizing it, your German vocabulary expands as you cruise through the book.
Each chapter is self-contained, making this a very user-friendly reference. You can go through it in any order you choose, zeroing in on your priorities. This book is practical and accessible, whether you’re looking for a clear overview of what you’ve covered in coursework or to reactivate the German you acquired a while back.
Conventions Used in This Book
I use a couple conventions in this book to help you spot essential elements in the text:
check.png I boldface German words and example sentences. I also boldface word endings to make them easier to recognize.
check.png I italicize English equivalents that accompany German words and sentences.
Foolish Assumptions
In writing German Essentials For Dummies, I made the following assumptions about who you are and what you aim to achieve from this book:
check.png You’ve acquired at least a smattering of spoken and written German in high school or at the college level.
check.png You want to do some review so you can pass a test or get to the next level of German by taking a placement exam.
check.png You want to expand your knowledge of German so you feel comfortable in both speaking and writing the language. (Alternatively, you want to dream in German.)
check.png You’re enthusiastic about honing your German skills because you use German in school, you do business with German speakers, or you intend to do some traveling in German-speaking countries.
Icons Used in This Book
Throughout this book, I include icons in the left-hand margin to draw your attention to valuable information. Here’s what each icon means.
differences_german.eps Pay attention to these key points. By noticing how German differs from English, you see patterns that show you how to assemble German into meaningful statements.
remember.eps This icon alerts you to key information that’s worth remembering. Stash this info in your mind because you’ll end up using it again and again.
Tip.eps Useful points that help you absorb German more easily and effectively await you when you see this icon.
Where to Go from Here
Wondering where to start? Try scanning the Table of Contents and selecting a chapter that piques your interest. Or use the index to look up a specific point you’re interested in reading about. Basically, you don’t need to follow the chapters in sequence because each chapter contains a discrete topic, so you can dig in to the information in any order you choose. Of course, there’s nothing stopping you from going ahead in a linear fashion if that’s your style. Just make sure you’re enjoying the process of soaking up the core concepts of German.
Chapter 1 takes you through some fundamentals of German, so you may want to check it out first to make sure you’re familiar with the topics and basic vocabulary covered there. Other than that, feel free to go at your own pace, proceeding in any order you choose. Skip over sections you’re not ready to do yet or don’t need to read right away. Most important, wherever you go in this book, Viel Spaß! (Have a lot of fun!)
9781118184226-pp0101.epsChapter 1
Laying the Foundations of German
In This Chapter
arrow Counting with cardinal and ordinal numbers
arrow Stating dates and times
arrow Pointing out the parts of speech
Familiarizing yourself with how to use numbers, time, and dates is basic to your German skills. Understanding parts of speech will get you ahead in using spoken and written German.
Crunching the Numbers
You encounter the two types of numbers, cardinals and ordinals, in myriads of situations. Cardinal numbers are vital for counting, prices, phone numbers, or for communicating time and dates. You use ordinal numbers, such as first, second, and third, to express a floor number or which street you take when following directions (like when someone tells you to take the third street on your left). The following sections go into detail about using both types of numbers.
1-2-3: Counting off with cardinal numbers
Table 1-1 shows numbers 1 through 29. Notice a couple of points about numbers 21 and up:
check.png They’re written as one word: einundzwanzig (21), zweiundzwanzig (22).
check.png They follow the cart-before-the-horse rule — that is, you say the ones digit before the tens digit, linking the words with und: for example, vierundzwanzig (24; literally: four and twenty).
Table 1-1 Cardinal Numbers 1–29
Tip.eps In spoken German, people commonly use zwo instead of zwei, which avoids the confusion — acoustically speaking — with drei. To double-check that you heard zwei and not drei in credit card numbers, prices, telephone numbers, room numbers, and so on, either ask or repeat the number(s), using zwo. Say, for example, Ich wiederhole vier-zwo-acht (I’ll repeat four-two-eight). If you’re still not sure of the numbers even after repeating them back to the speaker, try the failsafe route — ask for them via e-mail: E-mailen Sie mir bitte diese Zahlen/ihre Telefonnummer. (Please e-mail me these numbers/your telephone number.) In writing, the number two is always zwei.
Table 1-2 shows representative numbers spanning 30 to 999. Double-digit numbers follow the same pattern as 21 to 29 do in Table 1-1: einunddreißig (31; literally: one and thirty), zweiunddreißig (32; literally: two and thirty), and the like. Numbers with more digits likewise flip the ones and tens digits: For example, you’d read 384 as dreihundertvierundachtzig, which literally means three hundred four and eighty.
Note that 30, unlike the other multiples of ten (40, 50, and so on) is spelled slightly differently. Dreißig has no z in its ending, whereas the other double-digits do (vierzig, fünfzig, and so on).
Table 1-2 Cardinal Numbers 30–999
Tip.eps In German, people often say telephone numbers in double digits, so you need to be super careful to get the sequence correct as you write the number. For example, the number 76 20 93 88 would be sechsundsiebzig, zwanzig, dreiundneunzig, achtundachtzig (six and seventy, twenty, three and ninety, eight and eighty).
Tip.eps Especially in spoken German, you can use einhundert (one hundred) instead of hundert (hundred). Doing so makes the number clearer to the listener.
When referring to currency, you can talk about the bills like this: Imagine you’re cashing 400€ in traveler’s checks and you want three 100€ bills and five 20€ bills. You say: Ich möchte drei Hunderter und fünf Zwanziger. (I’d like three hundreds [euro bills] and five twenties.) The numbers Hunderter and Zwanziger are nouns, and you form them like this: Take the number, for example hundert, and add -er to the end of the number: hundert + -er = Hunderter.
For numbers higher than 999, look at Table 1-3. Notice that the decimal point in German numbers represents the comma in English.
Table 1-3 Numbers Greater Than 999
differences_german.eps In English, a comma indicates thousands and a period shows decimals. German (and many other languages) does the reverse: It uses a period (Punkt) for thousands and the comma (Komma) as a decimal point. Look at these examples:
English: 1 inch = 2.54 centimeters
Deutsch: 1 Zentimeter (centimeters) = 0,39 Zoll (inches) 0,39 is read as null Komma drei neun.
English: Mount Everest is 29,029 feet high.
Deutsch: Mount Everest ist 8.848 Meter hoch. 8.848 is read as achttausendachthundertachtundvierzig.
1st, 2nd, 3rd: Lining up with ordinal numbers
Ordinal numbers are the kinds of numbers that show what order things come in. You need ordinal numbers when you’re talking about das Datum (the date), die Feiertage (the holidays), die Stockwerke in einem Hotel (the floors in a hotel), and stuff like that.
Ordinal numbers function as adjectives, so they have the adjective endings you normally use in a sentence. (See Chapter 5 for specifics on adjectives.) The general rule for forming ordinal numbers is to add -te to the numbers 1 through 19 and then -ste to the numbers 20 and above. For example: Nach der achten Tasse Kaffee, ist er am Schreibtisch eingeschlafen. (After the eighth cup of coffee, he fell asleep on the desk.)
The three exceptions to this rule are erste (first), dritte (third), and siebte (seventh). For example: Reinhold Messner war der erste Mensch, der Mount Everest ohne Sauerstoffmaske bestieg. (Reinhold Messner was the first person to climb Mt. Everest without an oxygen mask.)
Two other adjectives you need to know when putting things in order are letzte (last) and nächste (next). You can use them to refer to a sequence of numbers, people, things, or the like:
Könnten Sie bitte die letzte Nummer wiederholen? (Could you repeat the last number, please?)
Look at the examples of ordinal numbers in Table 1-4. The