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  1. German 3: Intermediate German. Continuation of German 2. A continued intensive study of basic grammar and vocabulary through readings, oral and written drills, composition exercises, and conversation. Completion of this course constitutes fulfillment of the language requirement. Never serves in partial satisfaction of the Distributive or World ...

  2. The Imperative (der Imperativ) The Imperative Mood in English: The imperative mood is used to express commands. Normally, the speaker is addressing someone directly, but the actual pronoun "you" is omitted: "Give me the gun!" "Stick it in your ear!" "Go jump in the lake!"

  3. der Akkusativ. In English: In standard English, either certain forms of personal pronoun ( I/me, we/us, he/him, she/her, and they/them) or else word order distinguish the nominative subject from the accusative object. The differentiation is between "I see her" and "She sees me," or between "The dog bites the man" and "The man bites the dog."

  4. Nominativ. In English: In standard English, the subject of a sentence is in the nominative case, which is marked either by word order or by certain forms of personal pronoun (I, we, he, she, and they). Thus the difference between "Dog bites man" and "Man bites dog" is clear, as is the difference between "I see her" and "She sees me."

  5. A list of them, with examples, is appended below. A further piece of good news is that German plural nouns have no grammatical gender . No matter what the gender was in the singular, the plural definite article in the nominative case is always die, the accusative is also die, the dative is den, and the genitive is der.

  6. The Present Tense (das Präsens) Every beginning is difficult. The Present Tense in English: English, in contrast to German, has a variety of tenses to indicate present time, and Germans who are learning English are often at a loss in deciding which to select: "I sing," "I do sing," "I am singing", or "I have been singing."

  7. In both English and German, infinitive clauses are a kind of dependent clause in which there is no grammatical subject, only an implied one, and therefore the verb is not inflected. An infinitive clause is particularly dependent on the main clause of the sentence for its meaning. Only through it can one find the necessary context for understanding the infinitive clause.