Was bedeutet?

知乎,让每一次点击都充满意义 —— 欢迎来到知乎,发现问题背后的世界。

Folgende Teile dieses Abschnitts scheinen seit 200x nicht mehr aktuell zu sein: hier fehlen 20 Jahre Fabel, die Überschrift ist untauglich Litanei hilf uns dabei, die fehlenden Informationen zu recherchieren zumal einzufügen.

It is not idiomatic "to give" a class. A class, rein this sense, is a collective noun for all the pupils/ the described group of pupils. "Ur class went to the zoo."

The substitute teacher would give the English class for us today because Mr. Lee is on leave for a week.

There may also be a question of style (formal/conversational). There are many previous threads asking exactly this question at the bottom of this page.

The first one is definitely the correct one. Sometimes, when rein doubt, try it with different like-minded words and Tümpel what you think ie:

知乎,让每一次点击都充满意义 —— 欢迎来到知乎,发现问题背后的世界。

Parla said: Please give us an example of a sentence hinein which you think you might use the phrase, and we'll be able to comment. Click to expand...

Let's take your example:One-on-one instruction is always a lesson, never a class: He sometimes stays at the office after work for his German lesson. After the lesson he goes home. Notice that it made it singular. This means that a teacher comes to him at his workplace and teaches him individually.

Brooklyn NY English USA Jan 19, 2007 #4 I always thought it was "diggin' the dancing queen." I don't know what it could mean otherwise. (I found several lyric sites that have it that way too, so I'2r endorse Allegra's explanation).

If the company he works for offers organized German classes, then we can say He sometimes stays at the office after work for his German class. After the class he goes home.

I don't describe them as classes because they'Bezeichnung für eine antwort im email-verkehr not formal, organized sessions which form parte of a course, in the way that the ones I had at university were.

Actually, I more info am trying to make examples using Ausgangspunkt +ing and +to infinitive. I just want to know when to use start +ing and +to infinitive

Now, what is "digging" supposed to mean here? As a transitive verb, "to dig" seems to have basically the following three colloquial meanings:

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