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URL:https://www.learndesk.us/class-de/5169853650436096/lesson/a0113d078fd17c22bc87000e7794f681?ref=outlook-calendar
SUMMARY:Linking Sentences Together
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260527T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260527T200000
LOCATION:https://www.learndesk.us/class-de/5169853650436096/lesson/a0113d078fd17c22bc87000e7794f681?ref=outlook-calendar
DESCRIPTION: When we describe people (or things), it often makes sense to link two sentences together:Jakob&nbsp;wollte alles wissen.&nbsp;Er&nbsp;war nat&uuml;rlich sehr neugierig.&rarr;&nbsp;Jakob,&nbsp;der&nbsp;nat&uuml;rlich sehr neugierig war, wollte alles wissen.
In English we can use&nbsp;who&nbsp;(or&nbsp;which) and&nbsp;that&nbsp;to do this:Jakob,&nbsp;who&nbsp;was very curious, wanted ...The child&nbsp;that&nbsp;was standing behind me started ...
In German we use the definite article (der,&nbsp;die,&nbsp;das) to do that. Sounds simple, but unfortunately it is not: We have to pick the article carefully according to the gender and number of the person (or thing) we are describing, and we also have to think of&nbsp;Akkusativ&nbsp;and&nbsp;Dativ. So look at a few more examples:Der L&auml;rm,&nbsp;der&nbsp;mich geweckt hat, kommt von einer gro&szlig;en Gruppe.
This example is easy &ndash; we will use&nbsp;der&nbsp;as a connecting word (relative pronoun&nbsp;is what these words are called,...

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