Westonci.ca is the best place to get answers to your questions, provided by a community of experienced and knowledgeable experts. Get detailed and accurate answers to your questions from a dedicated community of experts on our Q&A platform. Connect with a community of professionals ready to provide precise solutions to your questions quickly and accurately.

Antworte mit eigenen Worten.

1. Was würdest du machen, wenn du eine Million Euro hättest?
2. Was würdest du machen, wenn du mit der Schule fertig wärest?
3. Was würdest du machen, wenn du ein eigenes Haus hättest?
4. Was würdest du machen, wenn deine Eltern nicht zu Hause wären?
5. Was würdest du machen, wenn du in deinen Mitschüler/deine Mitschülerin verliebt wärest?
6. Was würdest du machen, wenn du nicht du wärest?


Sagot :

Answer:

1. Ich würde ein teures Auto und schöne Kleider für mich selbst kaufen, wenn ich eine Million Euro hättest

-I would buy an expensive car and nice clothes for myself if I had a million Euros

(WO may be a bit scuffed)

2. Ich werde feiern, wenn ich mit der Schule fertig bin  

- I will party when I finish school   (feiren = to party/celebrate)

3. Ich würde in meinem eigenes Hause wohnen, wenn ich in eigenes Haus hätte

-I would live in my own house if I had my own house  (pretty big brain stuff going on here)

4. Ich würde eine Party veranstalten wenn meine Eltern nicht zu Hause wären

-I would throw a party if my parents weren't home

5. I'm just gonna skip this one...

6. keine Ahnung

-no Idea

just a suggestion for this: switch some of the verbs around so that it still makes sense but is more personal

also my answers maybe a bit scuffed as I haven't been fully taught the subjunctive (Konjunktiv) case yet

was finishing up breakfast in New York when my dad sent me a text message. He was ready to die, and he needed me to help.
The request left me shaken, but that’s different than saying it came as a shock. I’d begun to grasp that something was really wrong 10 months before, in May 2019, when he’d come to California from Maine. He was there to meet his first granddaughter, Fern, to whom I’d recently given birth. But he couldn’t bend down to pick her up. He was having trouble walking, and he spoke of the future in uncharacteristically dark terms. We’d traveled to see him in Maine four times