Key: You/Me is talking in quotation marks (",")
Your friend talks in no quotation marks
"Hi Jerry." Hi Jake, how are you today? "I'm good, how are you." Good thanks for asking. What classes do you have? "I have Math, then Science, then ELA (English Language Arts), then Social Studies. What do you have?" I have Social Studies, then Science, then Math, then ELA. "Hey, we both have a class together." Yeah that's cool. Describe what you have for class "I have a yellow pencil, and I need a pink eraser. What about you?" I have a pink eraser, and I need a yellow pencil. "Ok well I have to get to class, see you later." Goodbye, see you after school.
Herr, in German, means <em>mister, sir, gentleman, </em>or in elevated cases, <em>lord</em> or <em>master</em>.
It's important to realize something about German: cases.
There are four different cases in German, and they are:
nominative - when something acts as a subject
<em>(the person doing the action)</em>
accusative - when something acts as a direct object
<em>(the thing the action happens to)</em>
dative - when something acts as an indirect object
<em>(like accusative but preceded by to, at, in, etc.)</em>
genitive - when something acts as possessing something.
<em>(the person to whom something belongs)</em>
Here's a sample sentence.
<u>He came into the garage and stole John's bike.</u>
The subject, <em>he</em>, is nominative.
The direct object, <em>the bike,</em> is accusative.
The indirect object, <em>the garage</em>, is dative.
The person possessing something, <em>John</em>,<em> </em>is in the genitive.
In English, cases don't matter very much.
However, in German they are extremely important.
German cases even change how to <u>write and say words<em /></u><em>.
(This is called <u>declension</u>.)
</em>
Herr will appear as Herrn because of its <em>declension</em>.
In the nominative, it's <u>Herr</u>.
In any other case, it's <u>Herrn</u>. (i.e., when it's acting as the object of a sentence)
When it's plural, it's always <u>Herren</u>.
Answer:
Sport treibt
Explanation:
You are in good shape if you do what ?
cough
gain weight
<h3><em>
do sports</em></h3>
sneeze
Answer :
Schwimmen - swim
Gehen - Go
Schreibe - Write
Reisen - to travel
So I think the answer is :
Leute mit viel Geld reisen gern
Translation:
People with a lot of money like to travel .