which with this-?
Why is the demonstrative pronoun in the accusative case?
*Which bike do you recommend?
*I recommend this bike
The verb "recommend" is in the dative case. Why is this sentence incorrect?
*I recommend this bike
Why is the demonstrative pronoun in the accusative case?
*Which bike do you recommend?
*I recommend this bike
The verb "recommend" is in the dative case. Why is this sentence incorrect?
*I recommend this bike
We have an English test about this, and I'm not sure which of the two is correct. They both sound good to me.
I'm supposed to write more reports and texts these days, and I'm sometimes unsure about the style… leaving out words… It should be easy to read… For example: Mr. Ulrich built a garage behind his house and furnished it with his own furniture. (Do you write: behind your house, or behind the house?) — A…
e.g.: I spoke to Mr. Müller yesterday.
F/18 am doing my Abitur and have a business administration exam tomorrow and a German exam on Thursday. I should actually be doing a training course at my mini-job today and a driving school theory lesson at 6 p.m. But I'll never manage it all because it's too stressful and I want to study for…
Hello, So, I'm currently writing a characterization, but the character develops enormously throughout the book. She starts out as a student, then she works at a supermarket, then she only takes care of her child, then she works for the city… But when characterizing her, you should also mention the character's job. Should you mention…
Firstly, this sentence is purely formally wrong because incomplete and therefore does not make any sense.
When a set begins “I recommend this bike ….”, then it must be continued or supplemented, WAS you recommend this bike. Now you can’t make recommendations for a bike because there is no ears and no brain.
When it comes to grammar alone, it is asked about the phrase “this bike”: WEM do you feel something? So this requires the tripod. And all this together is formal grammatical and content just completely wrong.
The correct question is WEN or WAS? Answer: The or DIESES bicycle (accusative).
There are numerous verbs that have a tripod object (often activated) and an acousative object (often unlived).
show someone something
lend something to someone
give someone something
recommend something to someone…
I recommend this bike. Dativ + battery
jmdm.jmdn./etw.recommend| recommended, recommended |
Because “this” would mean the bike you feel something. (As if it were a person. “I recommend to shower this man. He stinks.”
I recommend (dir) this bike. (For it is stable.)