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 How Bavaria is different from the rest of Germany?
How Bavaria is different from the rest of Germany? I am going to visit Austria and Munchen this summer. I suspect that Bavaria in terms of language, culture, and historical traditions closer to A...


 .Does this make sense in German?
Als ich war zehn Jahre alt, ich war sehr gesellig. Ich war überhaupt nicht schüchtern. Ich liebte die Spice Girls, unc ich wollte Britisch werden. Ich sprach mit einem Akzent! Ich war ein seltsames ...


 For those that have worked/are working in Germany with limited language skills-I need your opinion?
I´m an American living in Germany, and have taken a 6 month Deutsch class. The class ends April 12th, and once it´s finished, I would like to start working.

What do you think I should ...


 I'm going to see my daughter in Germany 8 days and I feel frozen.?
I am scared to go throught customs, scared to leave my husband and dogs (I never really go anywhere). I'll be gone a month. I afraid I'll cry all the way over there. I am just plain aold ...


 What is the nearest ocean to Germany?
I am doing Geography work. Can someone tell me ASAP?!...


 German Project Help Again!!!?
I am doing a project for a German class and I did not get enough responses last time! I need to take a survey of only German citizens! My project is about American shows available in Germany and ...


 My son will be traveling to Germany in June. (first trip outside the US)?
He will be traveling to Frankfurt, Rothenburg, Munich, Neuschwanstein, Lucerne, Heidelberg, and a Rhine cruise. Anyone have any tips for safety, food, things to see, etc? How expensive is food ...


 What do you Germans think of this - One in four Germans think Nazi rule was not all bad, poll reveals?
http://www.dailymail.co.
"Eva Herman, 48, said at a book launch that while there was 'much that ...


 Germans - what is your favourite beer?
...


 The name of an American military base in German?
Does anyone know the name or names of a German town where a lot of American families resides during the 1980s? The specific town that I am looking for was a short drive from the base and an estimated ...


 I goings to getsing Nazi tatoo on back, whats you Alemanes thinksings abouts it?
swastica on my backs I M...


 What is there to see and do in Frankfurt and Berlin in early July?
And how far is Hofheim from Frankfurt?...


 What is the word that Germans use to say goodby that sounds like 'chus'? Is it a derivitive of 'cheers' maybe?
...


 Can anyone give me an example on traditional German male names?
I have only heard Assef (from The Kiterunner). Any other traditional German male names?...


 What has really happened to the rest of Germany?
I am from a small village in Bayern (Germany) and all people in my village are wearing dirndl and lederhosen. We listen to real German music, not Tokio Hotel or Rammstein. In my village people have ...


 What's Germany like?

Additional Details
Thing is I'm not much of a drinker. Just wanna see where my grandparents came from....


 What do they teach people about the Holocaust in Germany?
I mean in schools, are the people there uncomfortable talking about it or do they just tell the Jewish people to get over it and try to sugarcoat it and skim over it?...


 German movies that work in america?
Im am trying to find some movies new old disney anything but hopefully a good movie were they speak in german in the movie.

ive baught movies before from germany and tried them in america, ...


 What does "doomkoff" mean? (i dont know if i spelt it right)?
im pretty sure its german, and i keep hearing people say it : /...


 If you are planning a travel, Germany is which of your choice?

Additional Details
(If you are planning a travel, is Germany of your choice?)...



Alex L

Does everyone in germany speak german?

someone today told me that most people speak english in germany. and that kids in school are getting taught english. is this true?

    



Show all answers


The baby penguin
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lol....Yes, almost EVERYONE speaks German in Germany...just because most people speak English (which I don't agree with) that doesn't mean that they speak it in their everyday life. It just means that they KNOW English.


blue_daffodil2005
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Yes most of the younger people can speak English here because we all get it taught at school! Often the kids learn more than 1 foreign language French, Italian, Spanish, Russian or even Sinic. My cousin for example has English, Italian and French lessons. It often happens when tourists try to speak German the German people automatically answer in English...a bit disappointing for some one who tried hard to learn German!;-)


CaBa
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germans speak german in everyday life.
if there is a foreign person in germany who asks something in english, we answer in english (in case we speak it)

whenever we travel to another country, we speak the language thats mostly understood in the country we go to, this may be english.

most schools start teaching english in 3rd or 5th grade. other foreign languages taught could be french, latin, spanish, italian, ...


Matt
I am an American that travels to Germany very often for business (once or twice a month).

Most Germans, especially the younger generations, speak English very fluently. This is because in Western Europe English it is usually a basic requirement in the schools. The same is true for Belgium, Poland, Austria... etc. etc. Of course, some people are not serious about their studies, and won't know it well. Overall, this is not the case though.

However, in Eastern Germany it is sometimes more difficult to get by with only English. The older generation was not required to learn English, and many speak Russian as their second language.

What many people don't know is that many Turks live in Germany (about 3 percent of the population... which came as migrant workers like the Hispanics in the US). Many of the Turks don't speak English, unless they are part of the young generation that grew up in Germany. There are also other ethnic minorities in Germany that may be less likely to speak English.

Overall, travel in Germany is very easy for Americans. If you can't communicate with language, people are generally friendly enough to try other means (hand gestures, etc.). Don't worry.


JB
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I am sure that many people in Germany speak English, and there are many foreign countries that teach students to be bilingual. However, people in Germany speak their native language to each other, and that is language is German.


Rowena
Many Germans speak English. Yes German children are taught English in school along with other languages like Spanish and French.


Christopher B
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My wife is from Germany and yes children learn English in school. My wife started to learn English in 5th grade, but today they start teaching English at elementary schools.
So it is not aproblem to find someone who is speaking English, but German is the main language


birdseye
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I hope so !


karen p
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In my observation,NOT ALL.Because,some people who came from other country and live in Germany don`t speak German.....like Turkey,Poland,Russian etc....They dont speak German,they speak their own language.

Talking about,school in germany....they teach english (they have English Subject) from kindergarten until the age 8
years..,not more...But they are some young Germans speak English.


fliege52000
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Normally every single Germans speak German Language. Immigrants, not everyone, speak not good German Language, but they learn it at school.
The kids start to learn in the 3. grade English already.


Erica
Most people can at least say "hi, how are you?" and "I would like...", just as many Americans can say "guten Tag" and "ich moechte..."

Most kids learn English in school, just like most kids in America learn French, German, Spanish, or Latin. However, most kids have at least five years of one foreign language, usually English or French. The knowledge they leave school with is most often between 1 and 3 semesters of American, college-level foreign language.

Most Germans' knowledge of English is at least pass-able. They can order pizzas and stuff like that if they have to, but it's not like the overwhelming majority of people are near-native speakers with Southern accents or something.

The quality of English textbooks is pretty awful (for example, the American-themed textbook was written entirely in British English), most people (especially in small towns) are not comfortable speaking English, and there are English words being integrated into German whose meaning changes, so there is often a lot of confusion in meaning (i.e., a "Bodybag" to a German is a messenger bag that goes across the body; "Back Factory" is the name of a bakery chain...). An acquaintance of mine, also an English teacher, recently tried to send her young daughter to an English-language Saturday morning school. At the end of the first day, the parents came early to get their kids and see what their kids had learned. All of the kids had learned to count to ten... incorrectly.



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