Money A2Z Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Conditional Clauses in German Grammar - Lingolia

    deutsch.lingolia.com/en/grammar/sentence...

    Conditional clauses are dependent clauses that are introduced by the word wenn. They express an action that only takes place under certain conditions. Learn the rules for constructing real and unreal conditional clauses with Lingolia’s online German grammar lessons.

  3. WENN | translate German to English - Cambridge Dictionary

    dictionary.cambridge.org/.../german-english/wenn

    wenn. – German–English dictionary. Ich komme dich besuchen, wenn ich Zeit habe. I’ll come and visit you if I have time. Wenn ich es nicht allein schaffe, werde ich um Hilfe bitten. Komm heim, wenn es dunkel wird. Come home when it gets dark. wenn nur / doch / bloß …. if only ….

  4. Entertainment and Celebrity Photos, Pictures and News From Around The World with WENN.

  5. "wann" or "wenn" - What's the difference - Your Daily German

    yourdailygerman.com/difference-wann-wenn

    Both wenn and wann are translations for when but they’re not interchangeable and lots of learners are struggling to tell the difference. And today, I’ll actually give you not one but TWO ways to answer this question.

  6. English translation of 'wenn' - Collins Online Dictionary

    www.collinsdictionary.com/.../german-english/wenn

    conjunction. 1. (konditional, konzessiv bei Wünschen) if. wenn er nicht gewesen wäre, hätte ich meine Stelle verloren if it had not been for him or had it not been for him, I’d have lost my job. selbst or und wenn even if.

  7. conjunction - Usage of the word "wenn" - German Language ...

    german.stackexchange.com/questions/4294

    Wenn is the condition that must be true, otherwise the subordinate action won't happen. But when you add immer to this sentence you are back in the temporal meaning (Whenever you do A, you also do B).

  8. wenn - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

    en.wiktionary.org/wiki/wenn

    From Proto-Germanic *wanjaz, diminutive of Proto-Germanic *wan- (“swelling, growth, lump, tumor”), of uncertain origin. Cognate with Middle Low German wene (“wen”), Middle Dutch wanne, wan (“goiter”).