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No Artist - Wie Bitte? (A Beginners' Course In German) Record 2 album flac

No Artist - Wie Bitte? (A Beginners' Course In German) Record 2 album flac Performer: No Artist
Title: Wie Bitte? (A Beginners' Course In German) Record 2
Style: Education, Dialogue
Country: UK
MP3 album: 1701 mb
FLAC album: 1713 mb
Rating: 4.9
Other formats: DTS VOC FLAC AU AUD MP3 DTS
Genre: Not albums

Complete your No Artist collection. No Artist ‎– Wie Bitte? (A Beginners' Course In German) Record 1. Genre: Non-Music.

Wie bitte? is a conventional expression. The more direct question when you did not hear what the other person said would be Was?, but like "What?" in English, it's considered rude to be that direct. The usual polite expression in German is Wie bitte?, while English speakers use a variety of others such as "Excuse me? Come again? What was that, please? Pardon?". I thought "Wie" ment how and "bitte" ment please.

Lesson 1 A1 A2 Lesson 2 A3 A4 Lesson 3 A5 A6 Lesson 4 A7 A8 Lesson 5 A9 Lesson 6 A10 A11 Lesson 7 B1 B2. Questions And Answers Practice. My', 'Your', 'Not' Practice. A BBC Television course of 30 programs for beginners in German First Broadcast October 1969 to June 1970 Repeated October 1971 to June 1972. This television series is accompanied by three books and three records. Made in Great Britain Recording first published 1969.

Record 1 Programs 1 to 10. A BBC Television course of 30 programs for beginners in German. First Broadcast October 1969 to June 1970. Repeated October 1971 to June 1972. Matrix, Runout (Stamped Runout, Side A): OP 133 0 BBC D. Matrix, Runout (Stamped Runout, Side B): OP 134 1 BBC D.

German Greetings & Introductions. If you want to make a good impression with German speakers, you'll need a few basic phrases to meet and greet people. After all, you're going to use greetings every time you have a conversation in German! These phrases are simple, easy to remember and will help you make new German friends. Hallo, wie geht’s? – Hello, how are you? (ha-low, vee gits?)

Lesson . : Bitte buchstabieren Sie. This lesson is about the German alphabet. Read and listen to this short phone conversation. Try to read it aloud. The translation of words and phrases is given below the text. The 26 letters in both German and English are shown above.

Learn German basics at no cost. Many of them are too ambitious and skip the basics while instructions are only given in German. From level A2 onwards they should be able to use lessons that are in German only.

Bitte," a common German word, can mean please, you're welcome, here you go, May I help you? and Pardon? depending on setting and context. Ich bin heute einkaufen gegangen. I went shopping today. Wie Bitte? Pardon me? Ich habe gesagt, dass ich heute einkaufen gegangen bin. I said, I went shopping today. Expressing "Here You Go" and "Please". A host might use bitte when handing something, such as a slice of pie, to a guest, as in: "Here you g. Or, a customer and a waiter might both use bitte in the following exchange: Customer: Ein Stück Apfelkuchen bitte. A piece of apple cake please.

And a German course in Berlin does not seem to be one of those. But sooner or later you will find out that it is much more intense to become part of the Berlin scene than just being a spectator. That is the right moment to start your Berlin German Course at the deutSCHule. You will find out in our Courses: German is the only true key to Berlin. Even though a lot of people in Berlin do not speak any proper German. To understand the mentality of the city, to take a deeper look behind all those historical fronts there´s no better way than a German Course Berlin at the deutSCHule

Tracklist

Lesson 11
A1 How To Describe Someone Or Something
A2 Practice
Lesson 12
A3 Shopping
A4 Practice
Lesson 13
A5 How To Ask Someone To Do Something
A6 Practice
Lesson 14
A7 How To Say What You Want Or INtend (And When)
A8 Practice
Lesson 15
A9 Future Time
A10 Practice
Lesson 16
B1 How To Talk About The Past-1
B2 Practice
Lesson 17
B3 How To Talk About The Past-2
B4 Practice
Lesson 18
B5 How To Talk About The Past-3
B6 Practice
Lesson 19
B7 How To Talk About The Past-1
B8 Practice
Lesson 20
B9 Revision
B10 Practice

Companies, etc.

  • Published By – British Broadcasting Corporation
  • Printed By – Moore & Matthes Ltd.

Credits

  • Design [Cover] – Hugh Marshall
  • Other [Language Teaching Adviser] – Antony Peck
  • Producer – David Hargreaves
  • Script By [Drama Scriptwriter], Voice – Milo Sperber
  • Voice – David Hadda, Dorothea Neukirchen, Lilli Demel, Michael Wolf , Werner Umberg

Notes

Record 2 Programes 11 to 20

A BBC Television course of 30 programs for beginners in German
First Broadcast October 1969 to June 1970
Repeated October 1971 to June 1972

This television series is accompanied by three books and three records.

Made in Great Britain
Recording first published 1969

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Side-A Runout [Stamped]): V OP 135 BBC 24
  • Matrix / Runout (Side-B Runout [Stamped]): 8 OP 136 D BBC
  • Other (SBN, Back-cover): 563 09220 3

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
OP 135/136 No Artist Wie Bitte? (A Beginners' Course In German) Record 2 ‎(LP) BBC TV OP 135/136 UK Unknown