 文档下载格式:pdf 上传:2022-6-21 22:18 阅读:11次 页数:431页 大小:7.78 MB|预览The Complete Idiots Guide to Learning German Second Edition - Alicia Muller.pdf内容摘要:Learning German Second Edition by Alice Müller and Stephan Müller Revisions by Lisa Graham
A Pearson Education Company 201 West 103rd Street Indianapolis, IN 46290 This book is dedicated, passionately, to L.M. and Wendy. Copyright © 2000 by Amaranth All rights reserved. No part of this book shall be reproduced, stored in a retrieval sys- tem, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. No patent liability is as- sumed with respect to the use of the information contained herein. Although every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the publisher and author assume no responsibility for errors or omissions. Neither is any liability assumed for damages resulting from the use of information contained herein. For information, ad- dress Alpha Books, 201 West 103rd Street, Indianapolis, IN 46290. THE COMPLETE IDIOT’S GUIDE TO and Design are registered trademarks of Pearson Education, Inc. International Standard Book Number: 0-02-863925-1 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: Available upon request. 02 01 00 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Interpretation of the printing code: The rightmost number of the first series of num- bers is the year of the book’s printing; the rightmost number of the second series of numbers is the number of the book’s printing. For example, a printing code of 00-1 shows that the first printing occurred in 2000. Printed in the United States of America Note: This publication contains the opinions and ideas of its authors. It is intended to provide helpful and informative material on the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the author, book producer, and publisher are not engaged in rendering professional services in the book. If the reader requires personal assistance or advice, a competent professional should be consulted. The authors, book producer, and publisher specifically disclaim any responsibility for any liability, loss, or risk, personal or otherwise, which is incurred as a consequence, directly or indirectly, of the use and application of any of the contents of this book. Publisher Marie Butler-Knight Product Manager Phil Kitchel Associate Managing Editor Cari Luna Acquisitions Editor Susan Zingraf Book Producer Lee Ann Chearney/Amaranth Development Editor Tom Stevens Production Editor JoAnna Kremer Copy Editor June Waldman Cartoonist Jody P. Schaeffer Cover Designers Mike Freeland Kevin Spear Book Designers Scott Cook and Amy Adams of DesignLab Indexer Lisa Wilson Layout/Proofreading John Etchison Ayanna Lacey Heather Hiatt Miller Stacey Richwine-DeRome Contents at a Glance Part 1: The Very Basics1 1 Why You Should Study German3 Learn plenty of reasons to study the German language. 2 Hitting the Books9 See how German is particularly useful for scholars. 3 Pronounce It Properly: Vowels 17 Learn to make the vowel sounds you will need to pro- nounce German words properly. 4 Pronounce It Properly: Consonants 29 Learn to make the right consonant sounds in German. 5 You Know More Than You Think41 Believe it or not, you already speak more German than you think, thanks to cognates.
Part 2: Ready, Set, Go! 53 6 Are Idiomatic Expressions for Idiots? 55 A basic knowledge of common idioms will help you to express yourself effectively. 7 The Joy of Gender 69 All German nouns are masculine, feminine, or neuter. 8 Fitting Form with Function83 The German language has four cases: nominative, accusa- tive, dative, and genitive. 9 Click Your Heels Together and Say: There’s No Place Like Deutschland95 Conjugating weak and strong verbs is relatively simple.
Part 3: Up, Up, and Away111 10 Haven’t We Met Before? Making Friends113 Strike up conversations with the right introductory phrases. 11 I’d Like to Get to Know You125 Make introductions, express possession, and describe your- self and your family members with adjectives. 12 Finally, You’re at the Airport 143 A few key phrases will help you give and receive simple directions and get around the airport. 13 Heading for the Hotel159 Learn to use the transportation system and to tell time. 14 Yippee, You’ve Made It to the Hotel!173 Do you want a room with a garden view? This chapter introduces the vocabulary you’ll need to make requests in a hotel. 15 What’s Your Number? 185 From money to phone numbers and addresses, learn to use numbers in German.
Part 4: Fun and Games195 16 A Date with the Weather 197 Talk about the weather in German and learn the days of the week, the months of the year, and the four seasons. 17 Let’s Sightsee211 Learn to read maps and ask questions first—then go sight- seeing. 18 Shop Till You Drop223 Learn to talk about clothes—and to ask specifically for the color, size, fabric, and design you’re looking for. 19 The Meat and Kartoffeln of a Home-Cooked Meal 239 When you go out shopping for ingredients, you’ll know where to go and how to ask for what you want. 20 Restaurant Hopping253 You can order a delicious meal in German and express your pleasure when you’re finished eating. 21 Monkey Business 267 Learn how to ask your new German friends to participate in sports and other fun activities. Adverbs will help you brag about your many abilities.
Part 5: Angst283 22 Dealing with a Bad Hair Day, an Empty Camera, a Broken Watch, and Blisters285 When you need something—including a boost—refer to this chapter for problem-specific expressions. 23 What Does the Doctor Recommend? 301 Describe your symptoms to the doctor, understand the di- agnosis, get the items you need at the drugstore, and tell your friends what you’ve got. 24 I Think I Forgot Something315 Learn to express yourself in the past tense. Part 6: When in Germany, Do As the Germans Do!323 25 Getting Your Message Across325 Everything you ever wanted to know about German and phones, using the right phrases when you talk, and han- dling the problems that commonly arise during local and long-distance calls. 26 Where’s the Nearest Post Office? 335 This chapter contains the phrases you need to know when you want to send anything from a love letter to a tele- gram. 27 I’d Like to Rent a Castle, Please345 How to get the castle, house, or apartment you want and how to use the future and the conditional tenses. 28 Living the Expat Life355 Vocabulary and information you need if you’d like to spend an extended time in Germany, and tips on using the subjunctive case.
Appendixes A Answer Key 363 B Glossary: Linguistic Terms and Definitions 387 Index391 Contents
Part 1: The Very Basics 1 1 Why You Should Study German 3 Should You or Shouldn’t You? ............................................3 Get Serious ............................................................................4 Immerse Yourself ..................................................................6 There’s Nothing to Fear ........................................................7
2 Hitting the Books 9 What Are All These German Words Doing Here?................9 When Only German Will Do ..............................................10 Lost in the Translation ........................................................10 How Much German Is Enough? ..........................................11 You Could Look It Up ........................................................12 Learning Parts of Speech, Inside Out....................................13 Now It’s Your Turn..............................................................13 Compounding Your German Vocabulary ..........................14 The Genetic Relationship Between German and English ........................................................14
3 Pronounce It Properly: Vowels 17 Vowels Must Dress Appropriately ......................................18 Are You Stressed? ................................................................18 Your Own Personal Accent ................................................18 A Few Peculiarities of the German Language ....................19 The Famous Umlaut ..........................................................19 Capitalizing on Nouns ........................................................20 Where Did All These Vowel Sounds Come From? ............20 Say A as in Modern ............................................................21 Say E as in Bed ..................................................................22 Say I as in Winter ..............................................................23 Say O as in Lord ................................................................23 Say U as in Shook ..............................................................24 Modified Vowels: The Long and the Short of Them ........24 Say Ä as in Fair ..................................................................25 Say Ö as in Fur ..................................................................25 Say Ü as in the French Word Sûr ........................................26 The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition
Diphthongs ........................................................................26 The Diphthongs el and al....................................................27 The Diphthong au ..............................................................27 The Diphthongs eu and äu ..................................................28
4 Pronounce It Properly: Consonants 29 Conquering Consonants ....................................................30 The Very Same Letters You Know and Love..........................30 Ex-plosives: B, D, and G ....................................................30 Freakin’ Fricatives and Fricative’s Relatives..........................32 Got a Frog in Your Throat? CH, CHS, H, J ..........................32 Aw, Nuts: Z and Sometimes C ............................................34 Double or Nothing: KN, PS, QU ..........................................35 VeRRy Vibrant: The German R ............................................35 Old Smoothies: S, β, SCH, ST, TSCH ..................................36 Herbie the Love Bug: The Classic VW ................................37 Pronunciation Guide ..........................................................38 Practice Makes Perfect ........................................................40
5 You Know More Than You Think41 Cognates: What You Already Know Can Help You ..........41 Perfect Cognates: Identical Twins ........................................42 How Much Do You Understand Already? ............................44 Close, but No Cigar ............................................................45 What Do You Think?..........................................................47 Where the Action Is: Verb Cognates ....................................48 This Is Easy..........................................................................49 False Friends........................................................................50
Part 2: Ready, Set, Go53 6 Are Idiomatic Expressions for Idiots? 55 What Are Idiomatic Expressions, Anyway? ......................56 More Idiomatic Expressions in German ............................57 Off You Go..........................................................................58 Putting Your Expressions to Use I (or How to Get There from Here) ........................................................59
viii Contents
It’s Time To … ..................................................................59 Putting Your Expressions to Use II (or What Time Is It?)......60 Go Left, Right, Straight, and Then Left Again ......................61 Putting Your Expressions to Use III (or Just Getting There in One Piece) ..........................................................61 So, What Do You Think? ....................................................62 Putting Your Expressions to Use IV (or What’s Your Opinion?)..................................................................63 How Do You Feel? ..............................................................64 Putting Your Expressions to Use V (or How Are You?) ..........65 Saying the Right Thing ......................................................66
7 Joy of Gender 69 Determining Gender: Is It a Girl or a Boy— or Is It Neuter? ..................................................................69 Absolutely, Definitely Definite Articles ................................70 Singular Nouns ..................................................................71 Compound Nouns ..............................................................75 When There’s More Than One Noun ................................76 Pluralities ..........................................................................76 Practice Those Plurals ........................................................79 What Have You Learned About Gender? ..........................81
8 Fitting Form with Function83 The Four Cases in German ................................................84 Starting with the Nominative Case ......................................84 What Gets the Action: The Accusative Case ........................85 Indirectly: The Dative Case ................................................85 It’s All Mine: The Genitive Case ..........................................86 Marking Who’s Doing What to Whom ............................86 The Case of the Definite Article ........................................87 Masculine Nouns ................................................................87 Feminine Nouns..................................................................88 Neuter Nouns......................................................................88 Plurals ................................................................................88 The Case of the Indefinite Article ......................................89 Subject Pronouns ................................................................90 Du Versus Sie—Informal Versus Formal ............................91 Er, Sie, Es? ............................................................................92
ix The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition
9 Click Your Heels Together and Say: There’s No Place Like Deutschland 95 What’s the Subject? ............................................................95 Verb Basics ..........................................................................97 Verbs in Motion ..................................................................97 Weak Verbs: Followers ........................................................98 The Endings of Weak Verbs ................................................99 Conjugation 101 ................................................................99 Strong Verbs ......................................................................101 Ch-ch-ch-Changes: My, What Strong Verbs Have to Go Through! ......................................................102 Conjugation 102 ..............................................................103 Ask Me Anything ..............................................................106 Intonation ........................................................................106 Nicht Wahr? ....................................................................106 Inversion ..........................................................................107 Ask Me If You Can............................................................107 And the Answer Is … ........................................................108
Part 3: Up, Up, and Away 111 10 Haven’t We Met Before? Making Friends113 Conversation Openers: Greetings and Salutations ..........114 Formal Greetings and Salutations ......................................114 Informal Greetings and Salutations ..................................115 What Planet Are You From? ............................................115 To Be or Not to Be? ..........................................................117 Get Nosy ..........................................................................120 Getting Information the Easy Way ..................................121 Ask Away ..........................................................................122
11 I’d Like to Get to Know You125 It’s a Family Affair ............................................................126 Are You Possessed?............................................................127 The Genitive Case: Showing Possession ............................127 Mine, All Mine..................................................................128 Using Possessive Adjectives to Show Your Preference ..........130 Let Me Introduce You ......................................................131
x Contents
Breaking the Ice ................................................................133 Getting Involved in Conversation ..................................133 Express Yourself with Haben..............................................134 Using Idioms with Haben ..................................................135 What’s He/She Like? ........................................................135 Figuring Out Adjective Endings..........................................136 Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary ..............................................139 Complete the Descriptions ................................................141
12 Finally, You’re at the Airport 143 Inside the Plane ................................................................143 Mainly on the Plane..........................................................144 Airline Advice ..................................................................144 On the Inside ....................................................................145 Finding the Right Words....................................................145 Signs Everywhere ..............................................................146 Going Places......................................................................147 Contractions with Gehen ..................................................148 How Do You Get To …? ....................................................149 Take a Left, Climb Across the Bridge … ..........................150 Verbs with Separable Prefixes ............................................150 Giving Commands ............................................................151 Take Command ................................................................152 Prepositions: Little Words Can Make a Big Difference ........152 Prepositions Are Particular! ..............................................153 Are You Out of Your Mind? ..............................................156
13 Heading for the Hotel159 Ticket to Ride ....................................................................160 Buses, Trains, and Automobiles ........................................160 A Means to an End ..........................................................160 Which (or What) Do You Prefer? ....................................161 Welcher with Singular and Plural Nouns ..........................162 The Third Degree ..............................................................163 Using What and Which ....................................................163 On the Road......................................................................164 Outside the Car ................................................................164 Inside the Car ..................................................................165 Your Number’s Up ............................................................166 Count Me In ....................................................................166 What Time Is It? ..............................................................169
xi The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition
14 Yippee, You’ve Made It to the Hotel!173 What a Hotel! Does It Have …? ......................................173 Calling Housekeeping ......................................................176 Going Straight to the Top ................................................177 The Declension of Ordinal Numbers ..................................178 My Seventh? No, No—This Is My Eighth Husband ............180 More Action with Verbs....................................................180 Wissen and Other Ways of Expressing Knowledge..............180 Verbs with Prefixes ............................................................182 Coming Apart: Verbs with Separable Prefixes ....................182 Sticking It Out Together: Verbs with Inseparable Prefixes....183
15 What’s Your Number? 185 Send Me a Card … Drop Me a Line! ................................186 Identifying International Abbreviations ............................186 Call Me … ........................................................................186 European Countries, According to Germans ..................188 Clams or Cabbage? It’s All the Same in Money ..............189 Deutsche Mark oder Eurodollar? ........................................190 Approximations and Oddities ............................................191 Let’s Go Fly a Kite … ......................................................191
Part 4: Fun and Games195 16 A Date with the Weather 197 It’s 20 Degrees, but They’re Wearing Shorts! ..................197 How’s the Weather? ..........................................................199 What’s the Temperature? ..................................................199 But It Says in the Paper … ................................................200 If It’s Tuesday, March 21, It Must Be Spring! ..................201 What Day Is It?................................................................202 A Mouthful of Months ......................................................203 The Four Seasons ..............................................................205 You Have a Date for What Date? ....................................206 Making a Date ..................................................................206 Time Expressions ..............................................................208
xii Contents
17 Let’s Sightsee 211 What Do You Want to See? ..............................................212 May, Must, Can—What Kind of Mode Are You In? ........213 The Power of Suggestion ....................................................216 Making Suggestions ..........................................................218 Responding to Suggestions ..............................................218 Just Say Yes, No, Absolutely Not........................................219 What Do You Think?........................................................220 More Suggestions ..............................................................221
18 Shop Till You Drop 223 Store-Bought Pleasures......................................................223 The Clothes Make the Mann ............................................225 Wear It Well ....................................................................226 Colors ..............................................................................227 Material Preferences ..........................................................229 What’s the Object? ..........................................................230 Position of Object Pronouns ..............................................233 Us, You, and Them: Using Direct Object Pronouns ............234 To Us, to You, to Them: Using Indirect Object Pronouns ....234 Asking for Something ......................................................235 I’ll Take This, That, One of These, and Some of Those ........................................................235 Expressing Opinions ........................................................236 What’s Your Preference? ..................................................237
19 The Meat and Kartoffeln of a Home-Cooked Meal 239 Shopping Around ............................................................239 Where Are You Going? ....................................................240 Prost! ................................................................................246 It’s the Quantity That Counts ..........................................248 A Trip to the Market ........................................................249 Getting What You Want ..................................................250
xiii The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition
20 Restaurant Hopping 253 Where Can I Get Something to Eat Around Here? (Wo kann ich denn hier etwas zu essen bekommen?) ....................................................................254 I Could Eat a Horse (Ich habe einen Mordshunger) ............254 Dining Out ......................................................................255 Gimme What I Need ........................................................257 You Need What? ..............................................................258 Waiter, Do You Have Any Recommendations?................258 That’s the Way I Like It ....................................................260 Spice It Up ........................................................................261 Special Diets ......................................................................261 Send It Back, Please ..........................................................262 How About Some Strudel, Sweetie?..................................263 Are You Thirsty? (Hast du Durst?) ....................................264 Can I Have a Doggy Bag? ................................................264 Good Morning, Say Cheese ..............................................265 It Was Delicious ................................................................265
21 Monkey Business267 Are You a Sports Fan? ......................................................267 What’s Your Game? ..........................................................267 Where to Play Your Game ................................................269 Express Your Desire with Mögen......................................270 Extending an Invitation ....................................................271 Accepting an Invitation ....................................................271 Refusing an Invitation—Making Excuses ..........................272 Showing Indecision and Indifference ..................................272 Do You Accept or Refuse? ..................................................273 Let’s Do Something Else ..................................................273 Entertaining Options ........................................................275 At the Movies and on TV ..................................................275 At a Concert ....................................................................276 Expressing Your Opinion....................................................276 Adverbs: Modifying Verbs ................................................277 Adverbs That Are What They Are......................................279 Position of Adverbs ..........................................................280 How Well Do You Do Things? ..........................................280 Just How Good Are You at Adverbs? ..................................281
xiv Contents
Part 5: Angst283 22 Dealing with a Bad Hair Day, an Empty Camera, a Broken Watch, and Blisters 285 My Hair Needs Help, Now! ..............................................285 Beautify Yourself ..............................................................286 Expressing Your Preferences ..............................................287 I Need Help ......................................................................289 Help! ................................................................................289 At the Dry Cleaner—in der Wäscherei ..............................289 At the Laundromat—im Waschsalon ................................290 At the Shoemaker—beim Schuster......................................291 I Need These Shoes............................................................292 At the Optometrist—beim Optiker ....................................292 At the Jeweler—beim Juwelier ............................................293 At the Camera Shop—beim das Fotogeschäft ....................294 Help, I Lost My Passport!..................................................295 Comparison Shopping......................................................296 Adverbs and Adjectives Compared ....................................296 Irregular Comparisons ......................................................298 Make a Comparison..........................................................299
23 What Does the Doctor Recommend?301 Where Does It Hurt? ........................................................301 You Give Me a Pain in the … ..........................................303 What Seems to Be the Problem? ........................................303 More Symptoms ................................................................305 What’s Wrong? ................................................................306 Doctor, Doctor ..................................................................307 How Long Have You Felt This Way? ................................307 From Finding Drugs to Finding Toothpaste ....................308 Special Needs ....................................................................309 Have It on Hand ..............................................................310 What Are You Doing to Yourself? ....................................310 Flex Your Reflexive Verbs ..................................................311 Reflexive or Not? ..............................................................312 Reflexive Verbs in Action ..................................................312 Commanding Reflexively ..................................................313 Be Bossy ..........................................................................314
xv The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition
24 I Think I Forgot Something 315 Are You Living in the Past? ..............................................315 Strong Verbs ......................................................................316 Forming the Past Participle with Weak Verbs ....................317 Forming the Past Participle with Mixed Verbs ....................318 Using Sein in the Perfekt....................................................319 Don’t Put Off Till Tomorrow What You Didn’t Do Yesterday ........................................................320 Did You or Didn’t You? ....................................................321 Forming a Question in the Past ......................................321 Answering a Question Negatively in the Past ....................322 Ask Questions ..................................................................322
Part 6: When in Germany, Do As the Germans Do!323 25 Getting Your Message Across325 How the @!#%*! Do I Use This Thing? ............................326 Your Basic German Telephone ..........................................326 You Need to Know to Make a Call ....................................327 Phone Home ....................................................................328 Who Is This? ....................................................................329 Operator, I’m Having a Serious Problem ............................329 What Did You Do to Yourself? Reflexive Verbs in the Past ......................................................................330 Excuses, Excuses................................................................331 Hey, It’s the Twenty-First Century! ..................................331
26 Where’s the Nearest Post Office? 335 Will My Letter Get There? ................................................335 Getting Service ..................................................................337 At the Post Office ..............................................................338 I Want to Send a Telegram ................................................339 Readin’ and Writin’ ..........................................................339 Can You Read This?..........................................................340 Getting It Right ................................................................341 Would You Please … ........................................................341
xvi Contents
27 I’d Like to Rent a Castle, Please345 I Want to Rent a Castle ....................................................345 Buying or Renting..............................................................347 All the Comforts of Home ................................................348 Let’s Buy Furniture ............................................................349 There’s Hope for the Future..............................................349 Expressing the Future ........................................................350 Tomorrow’s Plans..............................................................351 What Would You Do? ......................................................351 I’m in a Subjunctive Mood ................................................352 Abracadabra, You Have Three Wishes ..............................352
28 Living the Expat Life355 Get Me to the Bank, Quick!..............................................356 Learning Banking Lingo ....................................................356 Transactions You Need to Make ......................................358 So You Want to Live in Germany? ..................................360 I Need My Wheels! ..........................................................360
Appendixes A Answer Key 363
B Glossary: Linguistic Terms and Definitions 387
Index 391
xvii Foreword One of the most fascinating dictionaries published in recent years is the historical dic- tionary of German Loanwords in English (Pfeffer and Cannon: Cambridge University Press, 1994). It describes the more than 5,000 German loanwords that have entered English over the centuries, which English speakers currently have at their disposal— enabling them to discuss topics ranging from angora to silicone, not to mention apple strudel and Wagnerian opera. This linguistic exchange is, of course, a two-way street, with German speakers wearing Jeans (note that all German nouns are capitalized!), while logging on to their Computer and looking into RAM-chips and Userports. In spite of Mark Twain’s notorious reference to The Awful German Language, speakers of English and German are indeed linguistic relatives, with a long common history of shared ideas and shared words. They are relatives who have been engaged in constant linguistic negotiation and exchange. Purists may lament linguistic contamination, but let us instead celebrate human ties. What better reason to learn German than to ce- ment these ties and to become part of what has been and continues to be an ex- tremely fruitful and exciting dialogue. The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition also points out that you know more than you think—the title of Chapter 5. This is not to claim that you al- ready know all there is to know. Establishing any degree of intimacy always requires effort, commitment, and desire, and these are the three prerequisites you will have to bring to your attempt to “get to know” German. What knowledge of the already exist- ing relationship should do is eliminate some of the fear of the unknown. After many years of teaching German, not to mention my own attempts to learn some Russian and some French, I have come to believe that it is fear of the unknown, fear of failure, and fear of embarrassing oneself by being less than perfect that play the biggest role in students’ difficulties with learning a language. Language anxiety is as real as math anxiety. The charm of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition is that it does all it can to welcome you, introduce you, make you feel comfortable and at home and encourage you to take risks. It could just as aptly be ti- tled German Without Fear. Americans have often heard that it’s not necessary to learn another language because everyone speaks English anyway. This claim is, of course, patently false, especially if you plan to diverge from well-trodden tourist paths or should you confront recent im- migrants to Germany who, while transporting you in their cab or taking your dinner order, are in the midst of their own efforts to learn German. The claim also ignores the access that knowing another language gives you to its culture, as well as the ef- forts made by non-native speakers of English to get closer to us. They, however, will not have forgotten and will truly appreciate your interest in them and your willing- ness to meet them at least halfway. And don’t forget the tremendous sense of pride you will have in mastering a new skill, and discovering a new talent. —Dr. Evelyn M. Jacobson Professor of German and Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, University of Lincoln-Nebraska Introduction In the last hundred years, parts of the world that we would have had to travel months by boat to reach are now just a few hours away. There are, however, many other ways of traveling. We travel in books, movies, and on the Internet, and we travel in our imaginations. Some people believe that the soul of a culture resides in the grammatical patterns, in the linguistic intricacies, in the phonetics of its language. The authors of this book share this view. If bank robberies aren’t your thing, learning German may be the next most satisfying and effective way of enriching yourself fast. The German language reveals German books, people, and customs in ways that are lost in translation. If you plan a trip to a German-speaking country, even before you get on a plane you should have the basic tools with which to decipher the code of the culture you’re about to enter. What are these tools? Traveler’s checks, an elemen- tary knowledge of the German language, and an open mind. You’re going to have to get the traveler’s checks and the open mind on your own; we’ll help you with the German language. Many chapters in this book are held together thematically as if you were off on an imaginary journey to a German-speaking land. In Chapter 12, “Finally, You’re at the Airport,” you’ll learn vocabulary related to air travel and airports. In Chapter 13, “Heading for the Hotel,” you’ll learn how to tell your bus or taxi driver where you’re going. By the end of Chapter 14, “Yippee, You’ve Made It to the Hotel!” you’ll be able to ask the desk clerk for the kind of room you want. Each chapter builds on the one that preceded it, expanding on what you have learned. Learning a new language is, after all, a bit like evolving rapidly from infant to adult. First you learn to crawl through the new sounds of the language, and then you learn to walk proudly through basic grammar and vocabulary. When you can keep your balance with everything you’ve learned, you’re well on your way to jog- ging through conversations with patient Berliners, the Viennese, and the good folk of Düsseldorf.
The Sum of Its Parts Part 1, “The Very Basics,” starts off by outlining why German is a tremendously im- portant language and how it will be of use to you as a student, businessperson, or tourist. Not only will you learn all about the advantages of reading German texts in the original, you’ll also find out how much you already know (before you’ve even started learning anything). You’ll also learn German consonant and vowel sounds. Part 2, “Ready, Set, Go!” introduces you to a selection of common German idioms (expressions in which the meaning is not predictable from the usual meaning of the words that make it up) and slang. You’ll get your first taste of German grammar, and you’ll be able to use what you know of German through cognates. By the end of this section, you’ll be engaging in and understanding simple conversations. The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Learning German, Second Edition
Part 3, “Up, Up, and Away,” introduces you to the vocabulary and grammar you’ll need to plan and take a trip to a German-speaking country. You’ll use the real greet- ings Germans use with each other; you’ll introduce yourself and give elementary de- scriptions. You’ll ask basic questions. A chapter at a time, you’ll arrive at an airport, catch a taxi or a bus, and make your way to the hotel of your choice. Most important, you’ll be able to get the room you want furnished with all those indispensable things (cable television, extra blankets, blow dryers, and so on) many of us cannot do with- out when we travel. Then, you’ll be able to go out and search for addresses, address a postcard, decipher a phone number, or exchange your dollars for Marks or Eurodollars. Part 4, “Fun and Games,” furnishes you with the vocabulary you’ll need to do practi- cally anything fun, from playing tennis to going to the opera to night clubbing. You’ll also learn how to make sense out of the weather report, whether it’s in the newspaper, on TV, or revealed to you via the aches and pains in the bones of the local baker. The chapter on food will help you understand where to buy all kinds of food in Germany and how to interpret a German menu. Finally, you’ll be introduced to the phrases and vocabulary words you’ll need to go on a shopping spree for chocolates, silk shirts, and Rolexes while the exchange rate is still high. Part 5, “Angst,” prepares you for the inevitable difficulties that crop up when you travel. You’ll learn how to make local and long-distance phone calls from a German phone and how to explain yourself to the operator if you have problems getting through. Is your watch broken? Do you need film for your camera? Did some food stain your new shirt? You’ll be ready to take care of anything, to ask for help, and to explain what happened to your German friends or colleagues when your angst-ridden moments are (hopefully) distant memories. Part 6, “When In Germany, Do As the Germans Do!” instructs you in the terminol- ogy you’ll need to spend, exchange, invest, borrow, and save money for an extended stay in Deutschland. By the end of this section, you should be able to buy or rent a house, an apartment, or even a castl 第1页 / 共431页 第2页 / 共431页 第3页 / 共431页 ©版权说明: 本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领! |