<span>C. Two things that can be people or things.
An example is, "Justin is taller than his math teacher," where the comparative adjective is taller. It compares Justin and his math teacher.
Hope this helps :)</span>
Answer:
Gladly
The answers and explanations are given below
Explanation:
All the words filling the gaps under regular verbs are correct
For the irregular verbs, the answers would be:
i)<em>sein</em>
ii) Movement
iii) we use <em>sein</em> in this case (viz <em>ist</em>...<em>geblieben)</em>
Iv) end
Hope it helps!
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! :)
Grim and dark would be your best bet
Answer:
gefallen
Explanation:
This verb is used in the German <em>Perfekt </em>tense, which is formed with the helping verb <em>haben </em>and the <em>Partizip Perfekt</em> of the verb. <em>Gefallen</em> is a strong, or irregular, verb, and its past participle form is also irregular: gefallen.
"Seine spitzen Bemerkungen über meine Freundin haben mir nicht gefallen."