Phrasebook
The time » Klokkeslæt
-
EN
English (US)
- AR Arabic
- DE German
- EN English (US)
- EN English (UK)
- ES Spanish
- FR French
- IT Italian
- JA Japanese
- PT Portuguese (PT)
- PT Portuguese (BR)
- ZH Chinese (Simplified)
- AD Adyghe
- AF Afrikaans
- AM Amharic
- BE Belarusian
- BG Bulgarian
- BN Bengali
- BS Bosnian
- CA Catalan
- CS Czech
- EL Greek
- EO Esperanto
- ET Estonian
- FA Persian
- FI Finnish
- HE Hebrew
- HI Hindi
- HR Croatian
- HU Hungarian
- HY Armenian
- ID Indonesian
- KA Georgian
- KK Kazakh
- KN Kannada
- KO Korean
- KU Kurdish (Kurmanji)
- KY Kyrgyz
- LT Lithuanian
- LV Latvian
- MK Macedonian
- MR Marathi
- NL Dutch
- NN Nynorsk
- NO Norwegian
- PA Punjabi
- PL Polish
- RO Romanian
- RU Russian
- SK Slovak
- SL Slovenian
- SQ Albanian
- SR Serbian
- SV Swedish
- TA Tamil
- TE Telugu
- TH Thai
- TI Tigrinya
- TL Tagalog
- TR Turkish
- UK Ukrainian
- UR Urdu
- VI Vietnamese
-
DA
Danish
- AR Arabic
- DE German
- EN English (UK)
- ES Spanish
- FR French
- IT Italian
- JA Japanese
- PT Portuguese (PT)
- PT Portuguese (BR)
- ZH Chinese (Simplified)
- AD Adyghe
- AF Afrikaans
- AM Amharic
- BE Belarusian
- BG Bulgarian
- BN Bengali
- BS Bosnian
- CA Catalan
- CS Czech
- DA Danish
- EL Greek
- EO Esperanto
- ET Estonian
- FA Persian
- FI Finnish
- HE Hebrew
- HI Hindi
- HR Croatian
- HU Hungarian
- HY Armenian
- ID Indonesian
- KA Georgian
- KK Kazakh
- KN Kannada
- KO Korean
- KU Kurdish (Kurmanji)
- KY Kyrgyz
- LT Lithuanian
- LV Latvian
- MK Macedonian
- MR Marathi
- NL Dutch
- NN Nynorsk
- NO Norwegian
- PA Punjabi
- PL Polish
- RO Romanian
- RU Russian
- SK Slovak
- SL Slovenian
- SQ Albanian
- SR Serbian
- SV Swedish
- TA Tamil
- TE Telugu
- TH Thai
- TI Tigrinya
- TL Tagalog
- TR Turkish
- UK Ukrainian
- UR Urdu
- VI Vietnamese
- Buy the book
-
-
001 - People 002 - Family Members 003 - Getting to know others 004 - At school 005 - Countries and Languages 006 - Reading and writing 007 - Numbers 008 - The time 009 - Days of the week 010 - Yesterday – today – tomorrow 011 - Months 012 - Beverages 013 - Activities 014 - Colors 015 - Fruits and food 016 - Seasons and Weather 017 - Around the house 018 - House cleaning 019 - In the kitchen 020 - Small Talk 1 021 - Small Talk 2 022 - Small Talk 3 023 - Learning foreign languages 024 - Appointment 025 - In the city026 - In nature 027 - In the hotel – Arrival 028 - In the hotel – Complaints 029 - At the restaurant 1 030 - At the restaurant 2 031 - At the restaurant 3 032 - At the restaurant 4 033 - At the train station 034 - On the train 035 - At the airport 036 - Public transportation 037 - En route 038 - In the taxi 039 - Car breakdown 040 - Asking for directions 041 - Where is ... ? 042 - City tour 043 - At the zoo 044 - Going out in the evening 045 - At the cinema 046 - In the discotheque 047 - Preparing a trip 048 - Vacation activities 049 - Sports 050 - In the swimming pool051 - Running errands 052 - In the department store 053 - Shops 054 - Shopping 055 - Working 056 - Feelings 057 - At the doctor 058 - Parts of the body 059 - At the post office 060 - At the bank 061 - Ordinal numbers 062 - Asking questions 1 063 - Asking questions 2 064 - Negation 1 065 - Negation 2 066 - Possessive pronouns 1 067 - Possessive pronouns 2 068 - Big – small 069 - To need – to want to 070 - To like something 071 - To want something 072 - To have to do something / must 073 - To be allowed to 074 - Asking for something 075 - Giving reasons076 - Giving reasons 2 077 - Giving reasons 3 078 - Adjectives 1 079 - Adjectives 2 080 - Adjectives 3 081 - Past tense 1 082 - Past tense 2 083 - Past tense 3 084 - Past tense 4 085 - Questions – Past tense 1 086 - Questions – Past tense 2 087 - Past tense of modal verbs 1 088 - Past tense of modal verbs 2 089 - Imperative 1 090 - Imperative 2 091 - Subordinate clauses: that 1 092 - Subordinate clauses: that 2 093 - Subordinate clauses: if 094 - Conjunctions 1 095 - Conjunctions 2 096 - Conjunctions 3 097 - Conjunctions 098 - Double connectors 099 - Genitive 100 - Adverbs
-
- Previous
- Next
- MP3
- A -
- A
- A+
8 [eight]
The time
8 [otte]
Choose how you want to see the translation:
Language families
About 7 billion people live on Earth. And they speak about 7,000 different languages! Like people, languages can also be related. That is, they originate from a common root. There are also languages that are completely isolated. They are not genetically related to any other language. In Europe, for example, Basque is considered an isolated language. But most languages have "parents", "children" or "siblings". They belong to a particular language family. You can recognize how similar languages are through comparisons. Linguists today count around 300 genetic entities. Among those, there are 180 families that consist of more than one language. The rest make up 120 isolated languages. The largest language family is the Indo-European. It is comprised of around 280 languages. This includes Romance, Germanic and Slavic languages. There are more than 3 billion speakers on all continents! The Sino-Tibetan language family is dominant in Asia. It has more than 1.3 billion speakers. The main Sino-Tibetan language is Chinese. The third largest language family is in Africa. It is named after its area of circulation: Niger-Congo. "Only" 350 million speakers belong to it. Swahili is the main language in this family. In most cases: the closer the relationship, the better the understanding. People who speak related languages understand each other well. They can learn the other language relatively quickly. So, learn languages – family reunions are always nice!
Did you know?
German is the native language of more than 90 million people. These people live primarily in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. German is also spoken in Belgium, Liechtenstein, northern Italy, and Luxembourg. In addition to the native speakers, there are 80 million people who understand German. German is one of the most-learned foreign languages. It is counted among the West Germanic languages, like English and Dutch. It was also influenced by other languages over many centuries. This is due to the fact that the language region is located in the middle of Europe. Nowadays, English terms above all are integrated into the German vocabulary. Another hallmark of the German language is the many different dialects. These are increasingly losing importance, however. The standard language is becoming more and more widespread, especially through the media. Because of this, many schools want to teach dialects again. German grammar is not especially easy, but it is worth the trouble! German is among the ten most important languages of the world.
German is the native language of more than 90 million people. These people live primarily in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. German is also spoken in Belgium, Liechtenstein, northern Italy, and Luxembourg. In addition to the native speakers, there are 80 million people who understand German. German is one of the most-learned foreign languages. It is counted among the West Germanic languages, like English and Dutch. It was also influenced by other languages over many centuries. This is due to the fact that the language region is located in the middle of Europe. Nowadays, English terms above all are integrated into the German vocabulary. Another hallmark of the German language is the many different dialects. These are increasingly losing importance, however. The standard language is becoming more and more widespread, especially through the media. Because of this, many schools want to teach dialects again. German grammar is not especially easy, but it is worth the trouble! German is among the ten most important languages of the world.