It is not idiomatic "to give" a class. A class, rein this sense, is a collective noun for all the pupils/ the described group of pupils. "Our class went to the zoo."
Cumbria, UK British English Dec 30, 2020 #2 Use "to". While it is sometimes possible to use "dance with" hinein relation to music, this is unusual and requires a particular reason, with at least an implication that the person is not dancing to the music. "With" makes no sense when no reason is given for its use.
Yes. Apart from the example I have just given, a lecture is a private or public talk on a specific subject to people who (at least rein theory) attend voluntarily.
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There may also Beryllium a question of style (formal/conversational). There are many previous threads asking exactly this question at the bottom of this page.
Replacing the bürde sentence with "Afterwards he goes home." is sufficient, or just leave out the full stop and add ", then he goes home."
Only 26% of English users are native speakers. Many non-native speaker can use English but are not fluent. And many of them are on the internet, since click here written English is easier than spoken English. As a result, there are countless uses of English on the internet that are not "idiomatic".
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In both cases, we can sayToday's lesson (i.e. the subject of today's teaching) was on the ethical dative. I think it's this sense of lesson as the subject of instruction that is causing the trouble.
As we've been saying, the teacher could also say that. The context would make clear which meaning was intended.
Melrosse said: Thank you for your advice Perpend. my sentence (even though I don't truly understand the meaning here) is "I like exploring new areas. Things I never imagined I'durchmesser eines kreises take any interset hinein. Things that make you go hmmm."
As I said rein #2, it depends on the intended meaning, and the context. If you provide a context, people will Beryllium able to help you. Sometimes they'Response interchangeable as Enquiring Mind said, but not always.
By extension, a "thing that makes you go hmm" is something or someone which inspires that state of absorption, hesitation, doubt or perplexity in oneself or others.
The point is that after reading the whole post I tonlos don't know what is the meaning of the sentence. Although there were quite a few people posting about the doubt between "dig rein" or "digging", etc, etc, I guess that we, non natives still don't have a clue of what the Ehrlich meaning is.