British weather: *is wet*
German weather: *Wetter*
Cosmic Funnies

titsay
i don't do bad sauce passes
Misplaced Lens Cap
Not today Justin
Sade Olutola

shark vs the universe
DEAR READER
Keni
AnasAbdin
$LAYYYTER

Janaina Medeiros

romaâ

#extradirty
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz
Jules of Nature
Aqua Utopiaïœæ”·ăźćșă§èšæ¶ă玥ă
seen from Malaysia

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@notenoughlanguages
British weather: *is wet*
German weather: *Wetter*

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Hey i'm thinking of learning a new language.This will be the first time i actually try to learn outside of school, so do you have any tips where and how to start ?
Hey, congratulations! Iâm glad youâre trying to learn a new language, I take it as itâs out of school you plan to teach it to yourself. If you go about it properly, it can be even more successful than in school. Iâve been teaching myself German for about 4 years now and itâs going pretty well, so here are my best tips:
- Find anyone who speaks the language to help you, family friends, people at your school, anyone you know who is willing to talk to you in your target language, even right from the start. Itâs really important, as when you learn on your own you tend to focus more on reading and writing than speaking and listening. As I donât know what language youâre learning this might be hard but donât be afraid of asking, most people will be happy to help you.
- Before you start even learning vocabulary, read up on/practise with a native speaker the pronunciation you need for the language. Some languages are much harder than others at this but itâs invaluable to know how to pronounce words when youâre reading them.Â
- To start with, try and find a simple textbook, maybe online or in a charity shop so that your learning has some structure to it and you have exercises to practise with. You could find one thatâs equivalent to the first school year you would learn that language in, just work through the chapters of the textbook to gain some basic knowledge.
- Listen to beginnerâs podcasts, theyâre free and you can find them for pretty much every language, even more obscure ones. As you get better at the language there will always be podcasts to match your level. Again, this is a really valuable resource to help with the listening aspect of learning a language and will help you to pick up pronunciation faster.
- Start to memorise basic vocab, everyone learns differently but I find making really small simple flashcards, just with the word in your target language on one side and your native language on the other is efficient for learning lots of vocab at a time. You can also do it online with apps like Quizlet, if you prefer using a computer.
- Assuming the language your learning conjugates verbs, learn all the pronouns and then learn how to conjugate regular verbs in the present tense (as well as some very important but possibly irregular ones; to be, to do; to have etc). Practise writing these in simple sentences and once you get more confident at this, learn the other main tenses your language uses.
- Get a notebook and practise writing out simple sentences about generic topics like describing yourself, your family, school, etc. This will help you get the hang of sentence structures and using the vocabulary youâve learnt.
- Some apps are useful for learning languages, like Duolingo or Memrise, they all have their ups and downs but are always a good resource to use. Duolingo is good for sentence structures and giving you topics to structure your learning, but it isnât particularly good for explaining grammar (again, this varies depending on the language). Memrise is a useful tool for memorising vocabulary without having to write it all out yourself.
- Watch TV and films in the language with subtitles. It counts as studying if you pay attention to the words. This can be good for picking up more colloquial language but as a beginner you always need to be sure youâre using it in the right context, and beware of regional differences (European/Latin American Spanish; Austrian/High German)
I hope this was useful for you! I wish you luck in learning your language & I hope you enjoy it. Iâd love to hear about how youâre getting on with learning it in the future.
Another Way to Practice Verbs
What to have:
Blank note cards
One colour of pen/marker
Loose paper/notebook
What to make:
Arrange two stacks of note cards.
The first stack will be pronouns. If a pronoun group (say, 3rd person singular, or 3rd person plural) has multiple pronouns, you can either write all of them on one card or a card for each. Or both! Doesnât really matter, do what you like.
The second stack will be your verbs. This is where the one colour comes in - write down the infinitive of each verb, but donât indicate any clue that could help you conjugate it. No underlining, no boxing, nothing on the reverse, nada. Make as many as you like. If youâre really new to the language, start with ten.
The third stack will be your verb tenses. Put it in your target language or another, whatever you like. You can always graduate to your target language later.
What to do:
Shuffle the stacks of cards. Lay them face-down, or put them in a container that you canât see through, whatever. The order doesnât really matter, so long as theyâre separate stacks.
Get your paper or notebook to a fresh page. Remember, donât give yourself any hints, even accidentally!
Now, reveal one of each stack and write it down. Lather, rinse, repeat as often as you want. Depending on how many in each stack you have, this can take anywhere from five minutes to half an hour if you want to go through the entire verb stack.
Examples:
je + avoir + passé composé
jâai eu
du + haben + prÀsens
du hast
Bonus Variations:
Use just the verb and tense stacks, and conjugate in all pronouns
Use just the verb and pronoun stacks, and conjugate in all tenses
Dedicate one day of the week to one verb tense
Set a daily limit - on the verb, the tense, or even the pronoun
Time yourself - 5, 10, 15 minutes
Write the cards in a different, non-native target language
Write the answers in a different, non-native target language
Write 5 sentences using each conjugation
** Feel free to reblog with your own suggestions! **
I found out that the second most widely spoken language in my country other than English is Polish. Iâm very happy about this, Polish is a beautiful language, thank you so much Poland for gracing us with the letter ĆŒ itâs brillant and I love you
The human body (German - English)
*some of the classifications might be weird, inaccurate or wrong because each organ is only listed once and i found it diffcult to make a clear list of so many words
der Kopf (Pl: die Köpfe) - head
der SchÀdel (Pl: SchÀdel) - cranium, skull
der Hinterkopf - occiput, back of the head
das Gesicht (Pl: die Gesichter) - face
das (Augen)lid (Pl: die Lider) - eyelid
die Wimper (Pl: die Wimpern) - eyelash
die Augenbraue (Pl: die Augenbrauen) - eyebrow
die Stirn (Pl: die Stirnen) - forehead
die SchlÀfe (Pl: die SchlÀfen) - temple
der (Haar)ansatz (Pl: die AnsÀtze) - hairline
das Nasenloch (Pl: die Nasenlöcher) - nostril
die Nasenscheidewand - nasal septum
der Mund (Pl: die MĂŒnder) - mouth
die Lippe (Pl: die Lippen) lip
das Philtrum - philtrum
die Backe (Pl: die Backen) - cheek
der Zahn (Pl: die ZĂ€hne) - tooth
das Kinn (Pl: die Kinne) - chin
der Kiefer (Pl: die Kiefer) - jaw
die Sinnesorgane - sensory organs
das Auge (Pl: die Augen) - eye
die Hornhaut - cornea
die Regenbogenhaut / die Iris - iris
der Ziliarkörper / der Strahlenkörper - ciliary body
die Linse - lens
die Netzhaut / Retina- retina
das Ohr (Pl: die Ohren) - ear
das AuĂenohr - outer ear
das OhrlÀppchen - earlobe
das Trommelfell - eardrum
das Mittelohr - middle ear
die Gehörknöchelchen / Ohrknöchelchen (Pl) - ossicles
das Innenohr - inner ear
die Hörschnecke - cochlea
die Nase (Pl: die Nasen) - nose
das Riechepithel / die Riechschleimhaut - olfactory epithelium
die Zunge (Pl: die Zungen) - tongue
die Geschmacksknospen /Â Geschmacksnerven (Pl) - taste buds
das Skelett - skeleton
der Knochen (Pl: die Knochen) - bone
das Gelenk (Pl: die Gelenke) - joint
das Kugelgelenk (Pl: die Kugelgelenke) - ball and socket joint, spheroidal joint
das Eigelenk / Ellipsoidgelenk - condyloid joint, ellipsoidal joint
das Sattelgelenk (Pl: die Sattelgelenke) - saddle joint, sellar joint
das Scharniergelenk (Pl: die Scharniergelenke) - hinge joint, ginglymus
das Radgelenk (Pl: die Radgelenke) - pivot joint, rotary joint, trochoid joint
das ebene Gelenk (Pl: die ebenen Gelenke) - plane jointÂ
die WirbelsÀule (Pl: WirbelsÀulen) - vertebral column, backbone, spine
der Hals (Pl: die HĂ€lse) - neck
das Genick (Pl: die Genicke) - nape, back of the neck
der Wirbel (Pl: die Wirbel) - vertebra
die Halswirbel (Pl) - cervical vertebrae
die Brustwirbel (Pl) - thoracic vertebraeÂ
die Lendenwirbel (Pl) - lumbar vertebrae
das Kreuzbein - sacrum / sacral bone
das SteiĂbein - coccyx / tailbone
der Oberkörper / der Torso / der Rumpf - upper body / torso
der RĂŒcken (Pl: die RĂŒcken) - back
der Brustkorb (Pl: die Brustkörbe) - chest, thorax
die Rippe (Pl: die Rippen) - rib
das Brustbein - sternum / breastbone
das Becken (Pl: die Becken) - pelvis
die Schulter (Pl: die Schultern) - shoulder
das Schulterblatt (Pl: die SchulterblÀtter) - scapula / shoulder blade
die Achsel (Pl: die Achseln) - armpit
die Brust (Pl: die BrĂŒste) - breast
die MilchdrĂŒse - mammary glandÂ
die Brustwarze / der Nippel (Pl: die Nippel) - nipple
der Brustwarzenhof - areola
der Bauch (Pl: die BĂ€uche) - belly
der Bauchnabel - navel / belly button
das Abdomen - abdomen
die Taille (Pl: die Taillen) - waist
der Arm (Pl: die Arme) - arm
der Ell(en)bogen - elbow
der Oberarm - upper arm
der Unterarm - forearm
das Handgelenk - wrist
die Hand (Pl: die HĂ€nde) - hand
die HandflÀche (Pl: die HandflÀchen) - palm
der Finger (Pl: die Finger) - finger
der Daumen (Pl: die Daumen) - thumb
der Zeigefinger - forefinger, index finger
der Mittelfinger - middle finger
der Ringfinger - ring finger
der kleine Finger (Pl: die kleinen Finger) - little finger, pinky
das Bein (Pl: die Beine) - leg
die Hinterbacke / Pobacke (coll) - buttock
die HĂŒfte (Pl: die HĂŒften) - hip
das HĂŒftgelenk (Pl: HĂŒftgelenke) - hip joint
der Oberschenkel (Pl: die Oberschenkel) - thigh
der Oberschenkelknochen (Pl: Oberschenkelknochen) - femur, thigh bone
das Knie (Pl: die Knie) - kneeÂ
die Kniescheibe (Pl: die Kniescheiben) - kneecap, patella
die Kniekehle (Pl: die die Kniekehle) - popliteal fossa, poplit, knee pit
der Unterschenkel (Pl: die Unterschenkel) - shank
die Wade (Pl: die Waden) - calf
das Wadenbein (Pl: die Wadenbeine) - fibula, calf bone
das Schienbein (Pl: die Schienbeine) - tibia, shinbone
das Sprunggelenk (Pl: die Sprunggelenke) - ankle joint
das Fersenbein (Pl: die Fersenbeine) - calcaneus, heel bone
das Sprungbein (Pl: Sprungbein) - anklebone, talus
der FuĂ (Pl: die FĂŒĂe) - foot
der Knöchel (Pl: die Knöchel) - ankle
die Ferse (Pl: die Fersen) - heel
die FuĂsole - sole of the foot
der Zeh (Pl: die Zehen) - toe
der groĂe Zeh (Pl: die groĂen Zehen) - big toe, hallux
der kleine Zeh (Pl: die kleinen Zehen) - little toe, pinky toe
das innere Organ (Pl: die inneren Organe) - internal organ
die Eingeweide / inneren Organe - viscera (Sg: viscus)
die DrĂŒse (Pl: die DrĂŒsen) - gland
die SchilddrĂŒse - thyroid(gland)
das Nervensystem (Pl: die das Nervensysteme) - Nervous system
das Gehirn (Pl: die Gehirne) - brain
die GehirnhÀlfte (Pl: die GehirnhÀlften) - cerebral hemisphere
das Diencephalon / das Zwischenhirn - diencephalon
der Hirnstamm - brainstem
das Kleinhirn - cerebellumÂ
das RĂŒckenmark - spinal cord
der Nerv (Pl: die Nerven) - nerve
das Herz-Kreislauf-System - cardiovascular system
das BlutgefÀà (Pl: die BlutgefĂ€Ăe) / die Ader- bloodvessel
die Pfortader (Pl: die Pfortadern) - portal vein
die Arterie (Pl: die Arterien) -Â artery
die Kapillare (Pl: die Kapillaren) - capillary
die Vene (Pl: die Venen) - vein
das HerzkranzgefÀà (Pl: die HerzkranzgefĂ€Ăe) - coronary vessel
das Herz (Pl: die Herzen) - heart
die Atemwege - respiratory tract
die Lunge (Pl: die Lungen) - lung
die Luftröhre - trachea / windpipe
die Bronchie (Pl: die Bronchien) - bronchus
das Zwerchfell (Pl: die Zwerchfelle) - diaphragm
der Rachen - pharynx
der Kehlkopf - larynx
die Nasenhöhle (Pl: die Nasenhöhlen) - nasal cavity
das lymphatische System / Lymphsystem - lymphatic system
der Thymus - thymus
die Mandeln (Pl) - tonsils
der Lymphknoten (Pl: die Lymphknoten) - lymph node
das LymphgefÀà (Pl: die LymphgefĂ€Ăe) - lymphatic vessel
das Knochenmark - bone marrowÂ
die Milz (Pl: die Milzen) - slpeen
das Verdauungssystem - digestive system
die SpeicheldrĂŒse (Pl: die SpeicheldrĂŒsen) - salivary gland
der Speichel - saliva
die Speiseröhre (Pl: die Speiseröhre) - esophagus / oesophagus
der Magen (Pl: MĂ€gen) - stomach
die MagensÀure - gastric acid
die Magenschleimhaut - gastric mucosa
die Leber (Pl: die Lebern) - liver
die Galle - bile
die Gallenblase (Pl: Gallenblasen) - gallbladderÂ
der Darm (Pl: die DĂ€rme) - bowel, intestine
der DĂŒnndarm - small intestine / small bowel
der Zwölffingerdarm / das Duodenum - duodenum
der Dickdarm - colon, large intestine
die BauchspeicheldrĂŒse - pancreas
Harnsystem - urinary system
die Niere (Pl: die Nieren) - kidney
der Harnleiter (Pl: die Harnleiter) - ureter
die Blase - bladder
die Harnröhre - urethra
Fortpflanzungsorgane  - Reproductive organs
das Geschlechtsorgan (Pl: Geschlechtsorgane) - sex organ
der Eierstock (Pl: die Eierstöcke) - ovary
der Eileiter (Pl: die Eileiter) - oviduct / fallopian tube
der GebÀrmutterhals - cervix
die GebÀrmutter / der Uterus - uterus
die Scheide / die Vagina - vagina
die Vulva - vulva
die Klitoris / der Kitzler - clitoris
die Schamlippen (Pl) - labia
die Plazenta / der Mutterkuchen - placenta
der Penis (Pl: die Penisse) - penis
die Vorhaut (Pl: die VorhÀute) - foreskin
die Eichel (Pl: die Eicheln) - glans
die Prostata / die VorsteherdrĂŒse - prostate
der Hodensack (Pl: die HodensÀcke) - scrotum
der Hoden (Pl: die Hoden) - testicle
die BlĂ€schendrĂŒse (Pl: die BlĂ€schendrĂŒsen) - seminal vesicle
der Nebenhoden - epididymis
das Integumentsystem - integumentary system
die Haut - skin
die Unterhaut / Subkutis - subcutaneous tissue / subcutis
das Haar (Pl: die Haare) - hair
das Schamhaar (Pl: die Schamhaare) - pubic hair
die Körperbehaarung - body hair, androgenic hair
der Nagel (Pl: die NĂ€gel) - nail

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German language & Sausages
Es ist mir wurst
(itâs all the same to me; I donât care) literally: âIt is sausage to meâ
Iâm not kidding, people say this all the time. It can be shortened to âWurst!â
Jetzt gehtâs um die Wurst!
(Itâs now or never) literally: âItâs about the sausage nowâ
armes WĂŒrstchen
(poor thing) literally: âpoor little sausageâ
Said ironically when you arenât feeling sorry for that person (das arme WĂŒrstchen).
die beleidigte Leberwurst spielen
(to get butthurt) literally: âto play the offended liver sausageâ
ExtrawurstÂ
(special treatment) literally: âextra sausageâ
jemandem eine Extrawurst braten = âto fry an extra sausage for someoneâ (to give someone special treatment)
eine Extrawurst kriegen = âto get an extra sausageâ (to get special treatment)
Alles hat ein Ende, nur die Wurst hat zwei.
(Everything must come to an end) = âEverything has an end, only the sausage has twoââ
french recipes: if youâre not making this in paris then whatâs the point. fuck you
italian recipes: use the left leg meat of a pig from one of three farms in this specific area of tuscany, or from this day my grandmother will begin manifesting physically in your house
american recipes: buy these three cans of stuff and put them in a pan congrats you cooked
chinese recipes, as handed down from mother to child: season it with a pinch of this and some of that. you want to know the exact amount? feel it in your heart. ask the stars. yell into the void.Â
English recipes: boil and salt it. Okay thatâs it enjoy
Greek recipes: You followed all the right steps but this isnât quite right. I donât know what to tell you.
Australia recipes: chuck it on the barbie
Latinx recipes: you will never make it better than your abuela, face the facts
Filipino recipes: add rice and soy sauce and some more rice MORE RICE MORE RICE MORE
Serbian Recipes: everything is salad. Ajvar? Salad. A single whole hot pepper covered in oil? Salad. Cabbage? Salad. Kajmak? Salad.
Lebanese recipes: If you donât have at least 3 family members cooking this dinner with you than you arenât doing it right.
Indonesian recipes: have you added spices? Add some just in case. Eat with rice. Itâs not a proper meal until thereâs rice in it. You just had bread/burger/cake/pizza? Eat rice anyway or youâll die of starvation
Bonus Javanese recipes: Have you added sugar? What do you mean itâs meant to be salty/sour/spicy/something else? ADD SUGAR.TO IT
Canadian recipes: Well part of the directions are in metric but you have imperial measuring cups. I hope you like math because weâre going to find out how many gallons in a litre and how many millimetres are in a cup.
Swedish recipes: Assemble all the beige items you have in your kitchen. Great. now add raw red onions, dill and salt and white pepper. if u prefer it blander, donât do the last things. consider serving it with jam
Norwegian recipes: listen after three days skiing uphill you will eat anything so stop complaining.
Indian recipes: spend two weeks digging the required spices out of your cupboards. Chop onions until you cry. Fry onions with spices until evey pore in your body is open, let the fragrance seep into your skin, become one with the curry.
german recipes: this meal isnât what you think it is. it has 164 different names in different regions. itâs either made of potatoes, served with potatoes, or itâs cake. thereâs a 50% chance itâs actually austrian, but donât tell anyone.
belarusian recipes: âcook over a slow fire until doneâ. how many degrees is a slow fire? when is âdoneâ? what am i even cooking thereâs no picture and the only ingredients are honey and cornflower
turkish recipes: âif you do this, thereâs really -REALLY- good change that youâll die because everything is too spicy or too sweet but here we goâ
romanian recipes: if you donât already know the ingredients and directions by heart then what are we doing here
Malay recipes: If itâs not spicy enough, itâs not worth it. You donât have coconut milk? Itâs doomed
Irish recipes: Potatoes. All potatoes. If itâs not potatoes itâs not food.
Estonian recipes: if itâs not brown, doesnât look like turd and has no blood in it, youâve failed
Langblr's and Studyblr's where u at
We need to be making groupchats with a common language so that both native speakers and people learning the language can learn. I sorta imagine this to include people with enough fluency to talk in the language and have some conversations but to learn phrases with. I speak conversational russian and iâd be down to help out some russian speaking people learn English.
I studied abroad for 2 weeks in ukraine and both me and the ukrainians learned from eachothee best. Language is best learned in immersion, rather than duolingo and rosetta stone teaching step by step with no grammatical explanation, this would seriously help out anyone here learning a new language, or interested in one.
Yess I think this is a great idea
what your foreign language study says about you
spanish: you are trying to fulfill a requirement
french: you run a hipster blog and are far too defensive of the french language
latin: you value academia very highly but you value dick jokes more
ancient greek: like latin except you also hate yourself
old english: you care way too much about lord of the rings
russian: you are russian
italian: you are a naĂŻve, romantic writer and you want to be a wine connoisseur (when you turn 21)
german: you are an intellectual overachiever who carries a heavy burden of existential angst
finnish: you just really like grammar for some reason
japanese: either you live entirely for challenges or you're weaboo trash there isn't much of an in-between
norwegian: you are ylvis trash

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ja ja ja ja ja a spanish person laughing or a german person during sex??? you decide
Finnish person struggling to remember what they were about to say next
polish person trying to get themself noticed
portuguese person trying to hush other people
Chinese person trying to do calculations
swedish person wanting to get out of a conversation
Korean person about to drop a fact
20 Questions
I was tagged by @wordscanchangeworlds (thanks!!) so here, my followers can have some information about me:
Rules: Answer 20 questions and tag 20 followers who you would like to get to know better!
Name:Â Stevie
Nickname: Steve
Zodiac Sign:Â Aquarius
Height: 160cm (5âČ4 for Americans)
Orientation:Â Lesbian
Nationality:Â British
Fav Fruit: ApplesÂ
Fav Season:Â Autumn
Fav Flower:Â Honestly Iâm terrible at plants idk
Fav Scent:Â Petrichor
Fav Color:Â I donât reeeally have one but Iâd say black
Fav Animal: Parasaurolophus
Fav song: Ohne Dich - Rammstein
Coffee, Tea, or Hot Cocoa:Â Coffee
Average Hours of Sleep:Â 8-9
Fav Fictional Character:Â Carlos the Scientist
Latest show you watched:Â Orphan Black
Number of Blankets You Sleep With:Â One duvet, Americans have a confusing system of blankets that I just had to google but in Europe we generally just have a duvet.
Dream Trip:Â Lapland
Blog Created:Â This isnât my oldest blog by far but about February or March 2017Â
I donât have 20 friends so Iâll just tag random people I follow:Â @nerd-mothership @ghostfromhogwarts @quotes-from-ailsa @fuckyeahestonia @kelticscribe @pantheisticwitch @asidicsugar @gayformaps @fyeahgeographyalligator @uselessfinnish @fjorn-the-skald @sorryihavemarchingband @lionmemes @hibikememes
Reading in other languages
Spanish: there are a few words you didnât know but theyâre cognates or you can figure them out from the context. Fairly understandable & grammar makes sense.
Mandarin: literally only one character you didnât know before but it messes up the whole sentence. No easy way to find out what it means either so barely half understanding of this one.
German: I UNDERSTAND ALL THESE WORDS SEPARATELY BUT THEY MAKE ABSOLUTELY NO SENSE IN THIS ORDER WHAT DOES THIS EVEN MEAN WHERE DID THE VERB GO? WHY IS THATÂ âDASâ THERE, SHOULDNâT THAT BE IN THE DATIVE? I HAVE GONE THROUGH EVERY GRAMMAR RULE I KNOW AND THIS STILL DOESNâT MAKE SENSE HELP
please look up the Hungarian word: megszentsĂ©gtelenĂthetetlensĂ©geskedĂ©seitekĂ©rt. It is not suuuuper long but the explanations of the suffixes are nice and it has a cool meaning. c: greetings!
Hey sorry I took so long but youâre right this is awesome:
meg- verb prefix; in this case, it means âcompletedâÂ
szent holy (the word root)Â
-sĂ©g like English â-nessâ, as in âholinessâÂ
-t(e)len variant of â-tlenâ, noun suffix expressing the lack of something; like English â-lessâ, as in âuselessâÂ
-Ăt constitutes a transitive verb from an adjectiveÂ
-het expresses possibility; somewhat similar to the English modal verbs âmayâ or âcanâÂ
-(e)tlen another variant of â-tlenâÂ
-sĂ©g (see above)Â
-es constitutes an adjective from a noun; like English â-yâ as in âwittyâÂ
-ked attached to an adjective (e.g. âstrongâ), produces the verb âto pretend to be (strong)âÂ
-Ă©s constitutes a noun from a verb; there are various ways this is done in English, e.g. â-anceâ in âacceptanceâÂ
-eitek plural possessive suffix, second-person plural (e.g. âappleâ â âyour applesâ, where âyourâ refers to multiple people)Â
-Ă©rt approximately translates to âbecause ofâ, or in this case simply âforâ
đ”German Music Vocabularyđ¶
Hörst du gerne Musik? - Do you like listening to music? Was fĂŒr Musik magst du? / Was fĂŒr Musik hörst du gerne? - What kind of music do you like? Ich höre gerne ⊠- I like listening to ⊠Spielst du ein Instrument? - Do you play an instrument? Ich spiele ⊠- I play ⊠Wer ist dein LieblingssĂ€nger? - Whoâs your favourite singer?
die Musik - music die Musikrichtung (Pl: die Musikrichtungen) - music genre klassische Musik - classical musik Musik hören - to listen to music die LautstÀrke - volume das Konzert (Pl: die Konzerte) - concert
das Lied (Pl: die Lieder) - song der Refrain (Pl: die Refrains) - chorus die CD [tseËdeË] (Pl: die CDs) - CD das Album (Pl: die Alben) - album die Schallplatte (Pl: die Schallplatten) - vinyl record
der Interpret (Pl: die Interpreten) (Fem: Interpretin) - artist, performer die Band (Pl: die Bands) - band der Chor (Pl: die Chöre) - choir das Orchester (Pl: die Orchester) - orchestra der SÀnger (Pl: die SÀnger) - singer (m) die SÀngerin (Pl: die SÀngerinnen) - singer (f) der Rapper (Pl: die Rapper) (Fem: die Rapperin) - rapper der Gitarrist (Pl: die Gitarristen) (Fem: die Gitarristin) - guitarist der Schlagzeuger (Pl: die Schlagzeuger) (Fem: die Schlagzeugerin) - drummer der Komponist (Pl: die Komponisten) (Fem: die Komponistin) - composer der Dirigent (Pl: die Dirigenten) - conductor
die Note (Pl: die Noten) - note
ganze Note - semibreve [UK] / whole note [US]
halbe Note - minim [UK] / half note [US]
â© Viertelnote - crotchet [UK] / quarter note [US]
âȘ Achtelnote - quaver [UK] / eighth note [US]
⏠Sechzehntelnote - semiquaver [UK] / 16th note [US]
der NotenschlĂŒssel - clef der ViolinschlĂŒssel - G-clef / treble clef der BassschlĂŒssel - F-clef/ bass clef das Notenblatt (Pl: die NotenblĂ€tter) - music sheet der Takt (Pl: die Takte) - bar, measure
verstimmt - out of tune ein Instrument stimmen - to tune an instrument laut - loud acoustic - akustisch
ein Instrument spielen - to play an instrument singen - to sing jodeln - to yodel komponieren - to compose
der Akkord (Pl: die Akkorde) - chord die Tonart (Pl: die Tonarten) - key Moll - minor Dur - major der Dreiklang (Pl: die DreiklĂ€nge) - triad das Vorzeichen (Pl: die Vorzeichen) - key signature das Versetzungszeichen (Pl: die Versetzungszeichen) - accidental âŻÂ das Kreuz - sharp â das B - flat das Intervall - interval vermindert - diminished ĂŒbermĂ€Ăig - augmented
der NotenstÀnder (Pl: die NotenstÀnder) - music stand der VerstÀrker (Pl: die VerstÀrker) - amplifier die Stimme (Pl: die Stimmen) - voice
das Istrument (Pl: die Instrumente) - instrument
das Klavier (Pl: die Klaviere) - piano
das Keyboard (Pl: die Keyboards) - keyboard
die Orgel (Pl: die Orgeln) - organ
das Akkordeon (Pl: die Akkordeons) - accordion
die Mundharmonika (Pl: die Mundharmonikas) - harmonica
der Dudelsack (Pl: die DudelsÀcke) - bagpipes
das Xylophon / das Xylofon - xylophone
Holzblasinstrumente - woodwind instrumentsÂ
das Saxophon (Pl: die Saxophone)- saxophone
die Klarinette (Pl: die Klarinetten) - clarinet
die Blockflöte (Pl: die Blockflöten) - recorder
die Querflöte (Pl: die Querflöten) - flute
Schlaginstrumente - percussion instruments
die Trommel (Pl: die Trommeln) - drum
das Schlagzeug (Pl: die Schlagzeuge) - drum set
das Becken (Pl: die Becken) - cymbal
die Pauke (Pl: die Pauken) - timpani
das Tamburin (Pl: die Tamburine) - tambourine
die Triangel (Pl: die Triangeln) - triangleÂ
Saiteninstrumente -Â string instrumentsâ
die Gitarre (Pl: die Gitarren) - guitar das Plektrum (Pl: die Plektren) - plectrum
der Bass (Pl: die BĂ€sse) - bass
die Harfe (Pl: die Harfen) - harp
Streichinstrumente - bowed string instruments
die Geige (Pl: die Geigen) - violin
das Cello (Pl: die Celli /Cellos) - cello
der Kontrabass - double bass
Blechblasinstruments - brass instruments
die Trompete (Pl: die Trompeten) - trumpet
die Tuba (Pl: die Tuben) - tuba
die Posaune (Pl: die Posaunen) - trombone

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hey quick critique regarding the long words post: the Serbian isn't really well known at all, most people from ex-yugoslavia think of the Croatian one as their longest word too! also the official german one (need another ask too many letters***)
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(***) is RindfleischetikettierungsĂŒberwachungsaufgabenĂŒbertragungsgesetz that's literally the beef labeling monitoring delegation (kinda? like transferring responsibility for tasks) law
Nice