Transliteration: kolege/kolegin
🇩🇪 Mein Kollege ist heute krank.
🗣️ Main kolege ist hoy-tuh krank.
🇺🇸 My colleague is sick today.
🇩🇪 Mein Kollege ist sehr nett.
🗣️ Mine koh-leh-geh ist sehr neht.
🇺🇸 My colleague is very nice.
🇩🇪 Meine Kollegen sind sehr hilfsbereit.
🗣️ Mine-uh koh-leh-geh-en zint zehr hilfs-beh-ryt.
🇺🇸 My colleagues are very helpful.
German
Learning German enhances career prospects, especially in engineering, finance, and academia, and deepens appreciation for Western philosophy and literature. An English speaker typically needs about 1,000-2,000 vocabulary words for basic fluency. While it may take 600-750 hours of study to reach general proficiency, basic grammar—including cases (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive), gender (der, die, das), and verb conjugations—can be grasped in a few months. German's precise but intricate grammar provides both a challenge and a tool for clear communication. Proficiency in German significantly aids in understanding cultural nuances and opens doors for travel and business.
You can use the word "Kollege/Kollegin" which translates to "Colleague".
The word "Kollege/Kollegin" is pronounced as "kolege/kolegin".
Not yet, but this functionality is coming soon. We're focusing on the quality of the written content first.
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