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Dominik
What makes difference between..?
greifen und ergreifen
merken und bemerken
What new meaning give prefixes such as <-er> and <-be> to any word? I know the difference is sometimes subtle, but is there any rule in German which gives an explanation to it?
20 gen 2018 11:33
Risposte · 3
1
I found this . Might give a little help.
It is German though.
https://www.scribd.com/document/114121953/Vorsilben-II
I could never come up with an explanation on my own :/
It says er- is indicating you achieve something through an action (with verbs), or a change in status like in erkälten, you change from healthy to one with a cold
Be- is in general indicating some general adjustment, and the word with be- is changed in to a transitiv verb.
( A transitive Verb can use an accusative object.) Seriously I do not think that is a sufficient explanation.
Imo it seems to be easier to learn them in context..
I guess I tried
20 gennaio 2018
Hi,
each prefix has an initial root meaning but it's more conceptual than strictly defined
you may find explanations in some grammar book (*)
some verbs have kept the original meaning, some have evolved like in any language
to learn them, you have to read books, listen to TV, practice with people
(*) here is a good starting point
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/be-#German
20 gennaio 2018
There isn't a simple answer, but maybe this helps a little:
https://de.wiktionary.org/wiki/er-
https://de.wiktionary.org/wiki/be-
(I'm sure, there is more to say about these two prefixes than this ...)
greifen / ergreifen: The prefix er- may give a 'subtle difference' in meaning, e.g.:
Ich greife nach dem Bleistift. Ich ergreife den Bleistift.
but there also can be new meanings: ergreifen also can have the meaning 'to apprehend' (pochwycić)
https://www.duden.de/rechtschreibung/greifen
https://www.duden.de/rechtschreibung/ergreifen
20 gennaio 2018
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Dominik
Competenze linguistiche
Inglese, Francese, Tedesco, Italiano, Polacco, Spagnolo
Lingua di apprendimento
Inglese, Francese, Tedesco, Italiano, Spagnolo
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