Answer:
oh, you too
but are you happy or bored
Correct because there was not a grammar mistake
I'm no expert on German, but that looks fine to me. All the words are correct but I'm not entirely sure about the cases/case endings. It looks pretty good to me though. Sorry if I couldn't be a better help :)
Answer:
Verbs which take the accusative
Ein Kaffee: Anna trinkt einen Kaffee. A coffee: Anna drinks a coffee.
Das Buch: Ich habe das Buch gelesen. The book: I have read the book.
Keine Wohnung: Wir kaufen keine Wohnung. No apartment: We are not buying an apartment.
Explanation:
The genitive case is used to show possession. You use the genitive to show who something belongs to. In English, we would use an apostrophe to indicate what belongs to someone or something, eg the school's headteacher. ... The 'of the' (ie the possession) is expressed in German using the genitive case.
I'm German. The words in the circle, (I guess that what you want us to identify) "von 12 bis 19 Jahren" means (from 12 to 19 years) "ganz Deutschland" means (whole Germany) Hope this helps! :)