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ChadThunderhahn
2 years ago

You can only be scared and scared. That’s what it’s like, but I’m still saying, “I’m scared”

treppensteiger
2 years ago

“I’m still saying, “I’m scared”

And with your expression, you’re totally right. It’s very rare and not quite easy to take some time for it and to plan it well.

Himbeereis13
2 years ago

Scare someone = put someone in horror

Scare yourself: don’t go

“I frightened myself” is also wrong. –> Because I cannot put myself in horror.

“He frightened her” is correct. -> He put them in horror.

“I frightened her” goes too. -> I put them in horror.

-> The verb “horse – terrified – terrified” is used transitively in this case.

be frightened = in terror

you are not going

“I frightened myself” is wrong –> You don’t put yourself in horror

“I am frightened” –> I’m scared.

“He’s scared of it” –> He’s scared.

-> The verb is used intransitive.

verreisterNutzer
2 years ago

I KNOW THE VERY GOOD AND SEE FOLLOW NOT WHY THE SO IS

treppensteiger
2 years ago

After some research and longer understanding phase:

If you’re not deliberately scared yourself, you’re completely right with your expression.

And who thinks if he says that he just scared himself?

treppensteiger
2 years ago
Reply to  treppensteiger

So in such cases, you can ask provocatively: “Why are you doing this when it throws you around?”

MooncatSoLf623
2 years ago

I believe that because of the ending at “shralled” it fits us and we’re scared or so

AlpaChinosXxx
2 years ago

‘terrorised’ or ‘terrorised’?

For the forms ‘you areheaped“ it isParticipates. Will scare the verbweakdeclining the stem formsfrighten,frightened,you are. On the other hand,strongdeclining shapesfrighten,heshk,heaped.

When do you need “excited”?

Use Participation IIyou arein the meaning of “in terror [scrap]; deter” (see Duden). In this context, the verb will be “shore”transitused. It therefore requires a rechargeable supplement.The perfect is formed with the auxiliary verb “have”.

Examples:

  1. Every year on Halloween he has the neighboring skirsyou are.
  2. The children gathered behind the door and played a prank to their parents. When their parents came home and opened the door, the children screamed loudly and their parentsyou are.
  3. I just got my sister outyou are. She dropped her glass from horror.

When do you need “rush”?

Use Participation IIheapedin theStandard language, to express the meaning of “in terror” (see Duden). In this context, the verb will be “shore”intransitiveused. It therefore does not need any battery care.The perfect is formed with the auxiliary verb “his”.

Examples:

  1. Yesterday night, it banged out loud at the house. I think the fuse has even jumped out because it didn’t burn light for a short time. II amrealheaped.
  2. The company has announced to dismiss other employees. The Works Councilison the extent of dismissalsheaped.
  3. We didn’t see the cyclist coming. Then it banged loud and wewerefirst totalheaped. What happened? …

https://langkulturkommunikation.com/ich-habe-mich-erschreckt-or-erschrocken/#:~:text=Wann%20man%20%E2%80%9Eerschreckt%E2%80%9C%20and,%20Perfect%20 with%20.

AbbyAaliyah
2 years ago
AlpaChinosXxx
2 years ago
Reply to  AbbyAaliyah

That’s not true you’ve read it completely.

AbbyAaliyah
2 years ago
Reply to  AlpaChinosXxx

I did. Stands in the lower part….

  1. hangs on the verb frighten Rechargeable object (whether or not), keeps the verb frighten in every form e: I scared him, I scared him, I scared him.
  2. In other constructions, strongly (with change of vowel) is bent: frighten, scare, frightened, frightened.
  3. If the verb is terrified with a reflexive pronoun, are both possibilities correct.

Now you can answer the question correctly in the picture: you have frightened or scared. Both are possible.