Die Beat-Tagebücher
As I said hinein #2, it depends on the intended meaning, and the context. If you provide a context, people will Beryllium able to help you. Sometimes they'Bezeichnung für eine antwort im email-verkehr interchangeable as Enquiring Mind said, but not always.
I think it has to Beryllium "diggin" the colloquially shortened form for "You are digging," or at least I assume the subject would be "you" since it follows a series of commands (see, watch).
edit: this seems to Beryllium the consensus over at the Swedish section of WordReference back hinein Feb of 2006
And many thanks to Matching Mole too! Whether "diggin" or "dig in", this unusual wording is definitely an instance of Euro-pop style! Not that singers who are native speakers of English can generally be deemed more accurate, though - I think of (rein)famous lines such as "I can't get no satisfaction" or "We don't need no education" -, but at least they know that they are breaking the rules and, as Kurt Vonnegut once put it, "ur awareness is all that is alive and maybe sacred rein any of us: everything else about us is dead machinery."
He said that his teacher used it as an example to describe foreign countries that people would like to go on a vacation to. That this phrase is another informal way for "intrigue." Click to expand...
Pferdestärke. It might be worth adding that a class refers most often to the group of pupils who attend regularly rather than the utterances of the teacher to the young people so assembled.
If the company he works for offers organized German Chillout classes, then we can say He sometimes stays at the office after work for his German class. After the class he goes home.
Replacing the belastung sentence with "Afterwards he goes home." is sufficient, or just leave out the full stop and add ", then he goes home."
Just to add a complication, I think this is another matter that depends on context. Hinein most cases, and indeed in this particular example in isolation, "skiing" sounds best, but "to Schi" is used when you wish to differentiate skiing from some other activity, even if the action isn't thwarted, and especially rein a parallel construction:
Actually, they keep using these two words just like this all the time. Hinein one and the same Songtext they use "at a lesson" and "hinein class" and my students are quite confused about it.
Melrosse said: I actually was thinking it was a phrase in the English language. An acquaintance of Bergwerk told me that his Canadian teacher used this sentence to describe things that were interesting people.
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The point is that after reading the whole post I still don't know what is the meaning of the sentence. Although there were quite a few people posting about the doubt between "dig rein" or "digging", etc, etc, I guess that we, non natives stumm don't have a clue of what the Tatsächlich meaning is.
Actually, I am trying to make examples using Ausgangspunkt +ing and +to infinitive. I just want to know when to use start +ing and +to infinitive