Table of Contents
What is Weis in English?
Weis. Into English (US) White. White. White.
What does ZWAR mean?
It’s like a small “threat” and a specification on when exactly you want someone to do this without any further discussion or protest about it. Or like: “I’ll buy one of these shirts. ( Und zwar) this one!” Here it is also kind of a filler word so that the sentence is not too short. It just means “namely”, “exactly”.
What does the German word last mean?
stop, persist, halt, encourage, urge. der Leisten noun. last. vergangen adjective. past, bygone, former, departed.
How do you pronounce the store Weis?
How do you pronounce Weis? The pronunciation of Weis is “WISE”.
How do you use WECH noch?
A quick look at how to use “weder… noch” (“neither nor”) in German….Ich will weder Kaffee noch Tee.
- Das hat weder Hand noch Fuß. ( idiom)
- There is neither rhyme nor reason in that.
- Lit: That has neither hand nor foot.
What age does Weis hire?
16 years of
16 years of age.
What is the difference between weiss ich nicht and Ich weiss nicht?
In a context where one may say “I don’t know” in English without any further elaboration, I think “Weiss ich nicht” would be more common than “Ich weiss nicht.” However, other phases like “Keine Ahnung” may well be even more common in practice. 1 Weiß nicht.
What does Weiß mean in English?
weiss. English Translation. white. More meanings for weiß. white adjective. hell, kreidebleich, blass. uncoloured adjective.
Is the sentence Ich weiß nicht colloquial or not?
The sentence ” Ich weiß nicht ” is colloquial but IMO not complete since it’s missing an object. It should read ” Ich weiß es nicht “. es or Das (in your case) referring to the question (its subject) that someone has been asked for. – try-catch-finally Jun 21 ’14 at 19:44 I don’t think it’s missing an object.
What is the meaning of the German word ‘Wissen’?
Wissen is an irregular German verb that means to know a fact. German, like many other languages, has two different verbs that can correspond to the single English verb “to know.”. Like Spanish, Italian and French, for example, German makes a distinction between knowing or being familiar…