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Ich bin ein Berliner" (German pronunciation: [ɪç ˈbɪn ʔaɪn bɛʁˈliːnɐ]; "I am a Berliner") is a speech by United States President John F. Kennedy given on June 26, 1963, in West Berlin It is one of the best-known speeches of the Cold War and among the most famous anti-communist speeches.
English: w:John F. Kennedy's w:Ich bin ein Berliner speech at the w:Berlin Wall. Length trimmed from 9:37 source in Moyea Video4Web Converter 3.1.0.0 (from 11.1 seconds to 9:13) and converted to .ogv filetype in Miro Video Converter
Ich bin ein Berliner; John F. Kennedy; Complete transcript available at the Kennedy Presidential Library. Nominate and support. - Durova Charge! 23:11, 12 July 2008 (UTC) Could you put the transcript on WikiSource and add a link to the Ich bin ein Berliner article on the description page. Z gin der 2008-07-13T01:01Z
It was here, on June 26, 1963, that US President John F. Kennedy gave his famous speech to the Berliners, in which he stated: "Ich bin ein Berliner". [1] The square was renamed John-F.-Kennedy-Platz on 25 November 1963, three days after Kennedy's assassination , [ 2 ] and a large plaque dedicated to Kennedy, mounted on wall next to the entrance ...
Google Translate is a multilingual neural machine translation service developed by Google to translate text, documents and websites from one language into another. It offers a website interface , a mobile app for Android and iOS , as well as an API that helps developers build browser extensions and software applications . [ 3 ]
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The area of Berlin was one of the first to abandon East Low German as a written language, which occurred in the 16th century, and later also as a spoken language. That was the first regiolect of Standard German with definite High German roots but a Low German substratum apparently formed (Berlinerisch may therefore be considered an early form of Missingsch).
+ 1 - it is common to refer to the inhabitants of Berlin as "Berliners" - this urban myth is quite funny, but it is nonsense. In German both sentences "Ich bin Berliner" or "Ich bin ein Berliner" are correctly understood - the second one is a kind of slang, the first one is the "Hochsprache", official German.