Examples of using "L'allemand" in a sentence and their english translations:
- I study German.
- I am learning German.
I will study German.
- I will study German.
- I'm going to learn German.
- I'll learn German.
I study German.
I'm going to learn German.
I am learning German.
Who teaches you German?
I want to study German.
Who teaches you German?
Who taught you German?
I'll teach you German.
I want to study German.
- I want to study German.
- I'll learn German.
My uncle can speak German.
- Tom speaks German perfectly.
- Tom speaks perfect German.
Who speaks German well?
Do you speak German fluently?
Why are you studying German?
- I'd like to learn German.
- I would like to learn German.
Learn German with enthusiasm.
I'm going to learn German.
- Learning German is important.
- It is important to learn German.
I have to learn German.
Why did you learn German?
German is a synthetic language.
A lot of Finns know German.
Who taught you German?
I am learning Swedish and German.
I have been studying German for two years.
What would German be without commas?
I'm starting to learn German.
I don't understand German.
I don't speak German.
He only spoke German.
She spoke only German.
He only knew German.
Why did you learn German?
She spoke only German.
I like German more than English.
How long have you been learning German?
German is a fascinating language.
It's time to learn German.
- Who can help you to learn German?
- Who can help you learn German?
- Who can help you guys learn German?
Maybe I should study German.
You don't know German, do you?
And I learned German that way.
German is not an easy language.
She can speak both English and German.
You speak German.
You don't know German, do you?
When are you going to start learning German?
- Who can help you to learn German?
- Who can help you learn German?
I'm excited about learning German.
Is German a Romance language?