the US was recently voted the largest risk to .... something, i dont know the exact term they used. world safety or peace or freedom. some such buzzword
in my generation, this has become normality. I don't think Germany is the best country, or even that much better than most others. I know we excel in some specific measures, but some of those things are rather regional within germany as well.
The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Learning, Teaching, Assessment,
abbreviated as CEFR, is a guideline used to describe achievements of learners of foreign languages across Europe and, increasingly, in other countries (for example, Colombia and the Philippines). It was put together by the Council of Europe as the main part of the project "Language Learning for European Citizenship" between 1989 and 1996. Its main aim is to provide a method of learning, teaching and assessing which applies to all languages in Europe. In November 2001 a European Union Council Resoluti...
"gewinnen" is used exactly the same as "to win" in english; "etwas (Akk.) gewinnen" means "to win something", where that something can both be the competition that is being won or the prize one gets for winning
"siegen" is probably more literally translated as "be victorious" (siegreich sein) or "to achieve victory" (den Sieg erringen), as the competition which is being won follows with preposition "in": Er siegte im Zehnkampf. (He was victorious at the decathlon.)
that's an "in" with dative, btw (therefore, "im (=in dem) Zehnkampf"), as it indicates a "location" (figuratively) of the victory, confer what i explained the other day:
@MazenBesher What Takkat didn't explicitly say: in + dative ("in dem Urlaub/im Urlaub") indicates a location of the subject or action of the sentence. in + accussative ("in den Urlaub") indicates a direction
i dont see why i would be obligated to root for anything. it is neither due to my participation that germany achieves anything (or not), nor do i benefit from the outcome
(in other words: you're sticking together two main clauses on the same level, so neither needs a comma, which usually marks only subclauses or delimits the items in an enumeration)
@Astrum: You were talking about how European airports compare to American ones, were you? My experience travelling to LA was: Hamburg is nice and fast as always, Zürich is nice as well - and arriving at LA was fast and nice as well. Did expect way more problems, but before we knew what happened, we already stood outside of the airport looking for our bus...
Don't know. You have to fill out all these things when entering, like ESTA (but you do that online way before), then the TSA info at the airport (done when walking to the gate), then the customs declaration (like don't import anything to eat, done in the plane) and that's it, basically. Just show your passport, get your finger prints scanned, and some of the security offers even talked German :)
I don't know if the simplicity had something to do with travelling over Switzerland.