Welche der beiden Formen ist grammatisch korrekt?
- “Deshalb gehe ich nie mit ihnen spielen.”
- “Deshalb gehe ich mit ihnen nie spielen.”
Oder ist beides korrekt/möglich?
Oder ist beides korrekt/möglich?
Wieso ist es hier por und nicht para ? Es wird doch schließlich ein Zweck beschrieben.
Was ist da falsch?
Wie heißt es korrekt: Ich habe als Mitarbeiter in einem Projekt in der Klinik oder an der Klinik Erfahrungen gesammelt.
Hallo zusammen Ich wollte euch gerne einmal fragen ob jemand weiß ob in Norwegen noch deutsch gesprochen wird ? Danke für die Antworten Lg
You tipped yourself. At 2. it must be:
“That’s why I never go play with them.”
You can say both, but 1. is better.
At 2. you say you’re going, but not playing, but maybe shopping.
Your sentences are both possible!
Then there are two different meanings of “you” depending on whether you write it big or small! If you write “it” small, you mean, for example, a plurality of people (with the doofen guys from the neighboring house).)
If you’re big, you mean a person you’re winning! “With you, Mr. XY…!”
Version 1 is correct. In version 2 the subject (I) is missing, after which one asks with who or what.
The second sentence is also correct. It’s a call.
This can only be done if one ignores the first sentence and the question as such. In fact, however, the imperative should be called “heh” and not “heh”.
Before the questioner corrected the question, it was not pointed out that the content is the same in an alternative sentence. In some grammar tasks, similar sentences are also set for a different statement. So at that time it was not fundamentally wrong before the questioner had supplemented the sentences.
In addition, “also” does not say what you should decide for, but that both are both going and going right.
“Also” says what you should choose. And as it comes to BEIDE phrases as an alternative with the same meaning, you’re wrong anyway.
This is also wrong. “Go” goes too.
https://www.verbformen.de/konjugation/imperative/gänge.htm
https://www.duden.de/konjugation/going
It is both correct, but it is different statements.
Wrong.
But it’s right.