Actually, that is Polish. It means "Two sentences why it is better to live in the countryside than in the city of Jerzy. Germany. Along with that, since you are most likely provided with an article, I cannot help you. If you were able to provide the article, I may be willing to help. ~Pooch ♥
Answer:
"Von" is used in front of adverbs, as well as to manifest starting point and point of arrival. When you want to indicate origin, referring to the place of origin, "aus" is used, except in front of adverbs, and also to express that it comes from a certain building or means of transport.
Answer:
The translation is: What do you think? What shouldn't we do at Tish? I believe... at least 2:
<u>eat fast </u>
<u>smack their lips </u>
<u>while eating speaking with your mouth full </u>
do not sit upright at the table
My answers are bold and underlined.
The usage of these six timing-related adverbs may seem tricky at first but with some practice it will become second nature. Few notes:
- Before/Nachdem/Seitdem clearly separate state of thing before/after something happened. Seitdem usually relates to a singular event (short in time) while Nachdem could refer to time period after some other time period (or even epoch).
- The really tricky couple is wenn/als: wenn implies "whenever ..." while "als" implies "when exactly once...". See your examples below...
Ich bestelle...nachdem...
Ich hatte schon ... als ..
Während due den Tisch ...
Bevor ich dir das Foto ...
Als er las, saß er ... (could also be wenn depending what they mean to say)
Als wir noch klein waren ...
Immer wenn er zu uns kommt ...
Nachdem ich ihn ....
Seitdem er den Unfall ...
Als wir eintraten ...
Jedesmal wenn wir den alten ...
Seitdem ich die Schwarzmeerküste ...
Answer:
Explanation:
J is between H and K. If HJ=6x-5, JK=4x-6 and KH= 129, find the value of HJ