Ich studiere Deutsch!

#German #Deutsch

Thanks to @Hexon for the suggestion on the short story book. The For Dummies workbook was more of an impulse buy.

I’m going to start using #Duolingo a lot less and branch out into other methods of study. I feel like I’ve reached a plateau on where Duo can take me, so it’s time to try other things.

#German #Deutsch

As if to reinforce my decision to ditch the owl, I had a particularly frustrating #Duolingo session this afternoon. Its just not fun anymore.

Kinda want to keep my streak though. 🤔

One of my many gripes about #Duolingo is that it does not tell you why you are wrong. Sometimes it’s obvious, but sometimes it is not.

For example: How am I suppose to know when his meeting was. I’m sure the form of “last” is the clue, but heck if I know what that clue is and how to avoid the mistake in the future.

@EddiKat You're correct that "last" is the clue - there's only one word that fits the grammar here. "Letzten" only goes with a masculine noun, so:

Ich hatte letzten Freitag (masculine: der Freitag) ein Treffen.
Ich hatte letzte Woche (feminine: die Woche) ein Treffen.
Ich hatte letztes Wochenende (neuter: das Wochenende) ein Treffen.

But I completely agree that kind of question can be frustrating because it requires a level of intuition that you probably don't have yet as a learner.

@kianga I was about to explain it too, but saw your comment just in time before embarrassing myself.

@EddiKat Native speaker here. If you have any questions, just ask. I am always pleased to help.

I share your oppinion on Duolingo and their lack of explaination. I would like to see an accompanying e-book for every language course, which primarily teaches grammar. In my opinion that falls short.

@pesti @kianga Thanks to both of you! I love the helpful creatures I find here on the #Fediverse.

Duolingo is pretty decent for teaching vocab, but falls very short on the grammar side. Like I am aware of gendered nouns of course, but it never tells you the gender of a noun or why the words that go around them conjugate the way they do.

For example, I had no idea that days of the week, weeks, or weekend were even gendered! Much less why there were three forms of "last." It was never mentioned, much less explained.

@pesti @kianga I've got a stack of resources I've been building to hopefully move my learning forward. Wish me luck. Or rather:

Wünsch mir Glück

@EddiKat @pesti Viel Glück  

There's so much stuff happening with grammatical genders in German that we don't even notice as native speakers, I can imagine how difficult it must be to learn from scratch. Feel free to ask if anything's unclear in the future, always happy to help