Sg.
1. ich (I) -e
2. du (you) -st
3. er sie es (he she it)-t
Pl.
1. wir (we) -en
2. ihr (you) -t
3. sie (they) -en
Sie (example Here you are teacher) -en
Lesen
Ich lese du liest sie liest
Answer:
B
Explanation:
Because it means Before. None of the others make sense.
Andreas fährt gern am Samstag ins Route 66.
So it’s in this order: Wer, Verb, Wie, Wann, Wohin.
But you have to match up Wie + Wohin so that they make sense. And if the Wer is more than one person, the Verb has to match.
You can talk about how environmentally they are in germany (different trash cans and common use of bicycles), the Autobahn and U-Bahn (metro) system, and the different holidays they celebrate to name a few differences
Was lernst du gern in der schule?
What do you like to learn in school? (why)
Was lernst du nicht gern?
What do you not like to learn? (why)
Gern is used along with another verb to make "to __" into "to like to __."
An answer would look like:
Ich lerne gern Mathe in der schule (I'm not very good at speaking German, take
this with a grain of salt.)