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Du - you Sie - you "Sie" is more formal. Germans usually take it seriously, so if you are talking to someone you don't know, asking for information, prefer to use "Sie". Also at school, talking to teachers it is always used. *Notice that "Sie" is used for: -"Sie" - you - both singular and plural (formal) (always with the -S- capital - "sie" - for she - "sie" - for they Don't worry, you will always know which one is which. You use different conjugations with each one and also by the context :)
دُرُوس ذَاتُ صِلَةِ
فِيدْيُوهَات ذاتُ صِلَة
O que sao os verbos modais em inglês? Por que eles sao diferentes dos outros verbos?
How do you say "I will miss you a lot" in Chinese?
¿Cuál es la diferencia entre “Gute nacht”, “Guten abend” y “Gutenachmittag”?
¿Cuál es la diferencia entre usar fine y good? Es válido decir: i'm good, we're good, it's fine?
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Quando e mais comum usar o "be going to" ou o "will". Pode me dar alguns exemplos quando usar cada um e por que seria mais adequado em casa frase?
In Western culture, we can nod our heads up-and-down for "yes" and shake them left-and-right for "no". Does Chinese have anything similar, or do they do the same thing? Are there other gestures for "yes" and "no"?