Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
German articles and pronouns in the genitive and dative cases directly indicate the actions of owning and giving without needing additional words (indeed, this is their function), which can make German sentences appear confusing to English-speaking learners.
On 27 December 2009, the German Wikipedia exceeded 1,000,000 articles, [10] becoming the first edition after the English-language Wikipedia to do so. The millionth article was Ernie Wasson . In March 2014, 88% of the edition's articles had more than 512 bytes , 57% had more than 2 kilobytes , and the average article size was 4,298 bytes. [ 11 ]
The following guidelines are intended to assist editors in Translating German Wikipedia articles for English Wikipedia.. Before starting a translation, editors should familiarise themselves with the guidance Wikipedia:WikiProject Germany/Conventions, which particularly covers the consistent and accurate naming of places, geographical features like mountains, rivers and glaciers, and man-made ...
German declension is the paradigm that German uses to define all the ways articles, adjectives and sometimes nouns can change their form to reflect their role in the sentence: subject, object, etc. Declension allows speakers to mark a difference between subjects, direct objects, indirect objects and possessives by changing the form of the word—and/or its associated article—instead of ...
The article is in Spanish, but it used to be a shorter article written in English from 3 February 2010 until it was expanded between 13 and 14 September 2024 by user FernandoAcuñaM. Arapata does not have an article on the Spanish Wikipedia. Ramkarlo82 (V • T • C) 13:51, 17 December 2024 (UTC)
In recent years, however, many English words have been borrowed directly from German. Typically, English spellings of German loanwords suppress any umlauts (the superscript, double-dot diacritic in Ä, Ö, Ü, ä, ö, and ü) of the original word or replace the umlaut letters with Ae, Oe, Ue, ae, oe, ue, respectively (as is done commonly in ...
Wikipedia is a free multilingual open-source wiki-based online encyclopedia edited and maintained by a community of volunteer editors, started on January 15th 2001 as an English-language encyclopedia.
Wikipedia does not use the German-language system of hyphenating the subdivisions of municipalities, as this meaning is not intelligible in English, e.g. Spandau, not "Berlin-Spandau". The article explains in the text that this is a place in Berlin.