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nurul ain shakila shafii2020-10-14 at 16:40
ich kommen aus malaysia, ich wohne in negeri sembilan.
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2020-10-15 at 08:09
Hallo Nurul,
“Ich komme aus Malaysia, ich wohne in Negeri Sembilan.“
Pay attention to always starting a sentence with a capital letter. Place names are always capitalized as well.
– ich komme, du kommst, er kommt, wir kommen, ihr kommt, sie kommen
Bis bald,
Juliane
SYAIDATUL AISYAH ABU BAKAR2020-10-11 at 01:49
ich komme aus malaysia, ich wohne in perak.
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2020-10-11 at 19:39
Hallo Syaidatul,
“Ich komme aus Malaysia, ich wohne in Perak.”
Sehr gut!
Don’t forget to capitalize the first word in the sentence and all places.
Viele Grüße und bis bald,
Juliane
Maria Virginia Semana2020-10-05 at 04:13
Hallo Juliana,
Ich komme aus Malaysia und ich wohne in Sabah.
Maria..
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2020-10-05 at 11:22
Sehr gut, Maria!
Bis bald,
Juliane
Nadilla Daleena2020-10-02 at 14:48
Hallo Frau Juliane! Ich komme aus Malaysia und ich wohne in Shah Alam.
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2020-10-02 at 20:09
Hallo Nadilla,
sehr gut!! It’s all correct. 😀
Just one thing: When you use “Frau”, it’s the family name that follows. In the course, let’s not be so formal and just use the first name (without “Frau”) and say “du” to each other, ok? 🙂 It somehow creates a more personal and friendly atmosphere. 🙂
Viele Grüße und bis bald,
Juliane
Nadilla Daleena2020-10-03 at 14:11
Thank you. Alright noted, Juliane.
Best regards,
Nadilla
CLAUDIA GUTIÉRREZ2020-03-06 at 07:20
Hallo Juliane!
Ich komme aus Mexiko und ich wohne in Los Cabos. Tschüss!
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2020-03-07 at 01:12
Super!
Heißt du Claudia oder Susana? 🙂
Bis bald,
Juliane
Heather Travar2019-12-02 at 20:56
Frage: I’ve been watching “Babylon Berlin”. Sometimes when one character is telling another to “Come”, instead of “Kommst”, it sounds like “Kommsie”. Am I hearing correctly? If so, why is this?
Danke!
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2019-12-02 at 22:30
Hi Heather,
this is probably “Kommen Sie!”, which is the formal imperative, used when you address someone asking them to do something. The informal version would be just “Komm!”. We will see the imperative on day 141, towards the end of level A1. It is a bit different from the regular verb conjugation.
Bis bald,
Juliane
Heather Travar2019-12-03 at 02:43
Ahhh! That makes sense because this one character was addressing her superior. I was also going to ask about “Komm” as well as I often hear that. Glad you answered the question before I asked! Danke!
Odaly Utt2019-11-12 at 17:22
Hallo Juliane!
Ich komme aus Venezuela und I wohne in den USA
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2019-11-12 at 21:27
Hallo Odaly,
“Ich komme aus Venezuela und ich wohne in den USA.”
Super, “ich” was probably auto-correct. 🙂
Bis bald,
Juliane
Odaly Utt2019-11-12 at 21:46
Danke !
Heather Travar2019-11-05 at 23:20
Ich komme aus USA und ich wohne in Raleigh.
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2019-11-06 at 20:56
Hi Heather,
herzlich willkommen!
“Ich komme aus den USA und ich wohne in Raleigh.“
Later on, you will learn that the US are a bit special. That’s because it’s a country in the plural. And for these countries, you always have to use an article. In the nominative case, the basic case, it’s “die USA”.
After the preposition “aus”, however, you will always have to use the so-called dative case. And in the dative, “die USA” becomes “den USA”: “Ich komme aus den USA.”
Don’t let this confuse you right now. We will get to the explanations later on and it will all seem logical. 🙂
Viele Grüße und bis bald,
Juliane
Omer Sanlialp2019-10-26 at 16:48
Guten Tag, Juliane!
Ich komme aus Amerika und ich wohne in Houston.
Juliane Klingenberg Nery2019-10-26 at 22:14
Hallo Omer,
yes! That’s correct.
But usually “Ich komme aus…” is followed by the country, region of city of origin. So you might better say “Ich komme aus der Türkei und ich wohne in Houston.”
– Turkey is a bit of an exception, because it is a feminine country: “die Türkei”. And the preposition “aus” is followed by the dative case, which you will learn about later. The dative of “die Türkei” is “der Türkei”, so: “Ich komme aus der Türkei.”
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ich kommen aus malaysia, ich wohne in negeri sembilan.
Hallo Nurul,
“Ich komme aus Malaysia, ich wohne in Negeri Sembilan.“
Pay attention to always starting a sentence with a capital letter. Place names are always capitalized as well.
– ich komme, du kommst, er kommt, wir kommen, ihr kommt, sie kommen
Bis bald,
Juliane
ich komme aus malaysia, ich wohne in perak.
Hallo Syaidatul,
“Ich komme aus Malaysia, ich wohne in Perak.”
Sehr gut!
Don’t forget to capitalize the first word in the sentence and all places.
Viele Grüße und bis bald,
Juliane
Hallo Juliana,
Ich komme aus Malaysia und ich wohne in Sabah.
Maria..
Sehr gut, Maria!
Bis bald,
Juliane
Hallo Frau Juliane! Ich komme aus Malaysia und ich wohne in Shah Alam.
Hallo Nadilla,
sehr gut!! It’s all correct. 😀
Just one thing: When you use “Frau”, it’s the family name that follows. In the course, let’s not be so formal and just use the first name (without “Frau”) and say “du” to each other, ok? 🙂 It somehow creates a more personal and friendly atmosphere. 🙂
Viele Grüße und bis bald,
Juliane
Thank you. Alright noted, Juliane.
Best regards,
Nadilla
Hallo Juliane!
Ich komme aus Mexiko und ich wohne in Los Cabos.
Tschüss!
Super!
Heißt du Claudia oder Susana? 🙂
Bis bald,
Juliane
Frage: I’ve been watching “Babylon Berlin”. Sometimes when one character is telling another to “Come”, instead of “Kommst”, it sounds like “Kommsie”. Am I hearing correctly? If so, why is this?
Danke!
Hi Heather,
this is probably “Kommen Sie!”, which is the formal imperative, used when you address someone asking them to do something. The informal version would be just “Komm!”. We will see the imperative on day 141, towards the end of level A1. It is a bit different from the regular verb conjugation.
Bis bald,
Juliane
Ahhh! That makes sense because this one character was addressing her superior. I was also going to ask about “Komm” as well as I often hear that. Glad you answered the question before I asked! Danke!
Hallo Juliane!
Ich komme aus Venezuela und I wohne in den USA
Hallo Odaly,
“Ich komme aus Venezuela und ich wohne in den USA.”
Super, “ich” was probably auto-correct. 🙂
Bis bald,
Juliane
Danke !
Ich komme aus USA und ich wohne in Raleigh.
Hi Heather,
herzlich willkommen!
“Ich komme aus den USA und ich wohne in Raleigh.“
Later on, you will learn that the US are a bit special. That’s because it’s a country in the plural. And for these countries, you always have to use an article. In the nominative case, the basic case, it’s “die USA”.
After the preposition “aus”, however, you will always have to use the so-called dative case. And in the dative, “die USA” becomes “den USA”: “Ich komme aus den USA.”
Don’t let this confuse you right now. We will get to the explanations later on and it will all seem logical. 🙂
Viele Grüße und bis bald,
Juliane
Guten Tag, Juliane!
Ich komme aus Amerika und ich wohne in Houston.
Hallo Omer,
yes! That’s correct.
But usually “Ich komme aus…” is followed by the country, region of city of origin. So you might better say “Ich komme aus der Türkei und ich wohne in Houston.”
– Turkey is a bit of an exception, because it is a feminine country: “die Türkei”. And the preposition “aus” is followed by the dative case, which you will learn about later. The dative of “die Türkei” is “der Türkei”, so: “Ich komme aus der Türkei.”
Bis bald,
Juliane
Hallo Juliane,
Ich werde das nicht vergessen.
Danke shön. 🙂
Super! 😀
“Danke schön.”
GutenTag, Juliane!
Ich komme aus Amerika und ich wohne in Florida.
Hallo Susan!
Sehr gut, herzlich willkommen 😀
Viele Grüße und bis bald,
Juliane