solange |
1. adv. meanwhile | |
2. conj. as long as, while | |
Du |
1. pron. alternative case form of du you (singular) (especially when used as a direct address in letters) | |
2. n. (literally) the thou, the you (singular) | |
jemandem das Du anbieten - to offer somebody the thou | |
3. pron. you (thou, singular familiar) | |
deine |
1. pron. feminine singular of deiner | |
2. pron. plural of deiner | |
3. det. feminine singular of dein | |
4. det. plural of dein | |
dein |
1. det. thy, your (esp. to friends, relatives, children, etc.). | |
2. det. singular of dein | |
Beine |
1. n. plural of Bein | |
Bein |
1. n. leg of a person, animal, or object | |
2. n. (technical, archaic, except in compounds) bone | |
Unter |
1. n-m. jack, knave (playing card) | |
2. prep. under | |
3. prep. below | |
4. prep. among, between | |
5. prep. (chiefly literary) with; along with; accompanied by an action (often concessive) | |
Die englische Sprache überlebte die normannische Eroberung unter weitgehendem Verlust ihrer ursprünglichen Struktur. - The English language survived the Norman conquest, largely losing, however | |
6. prep. (rare, or regional) during | |
meinen |
1. v. to opine, to think; to believe; to suppose | |
Ich meine, das war letztes oder vorletztes Jahr. - I think it was last year or the year before. | |
2. v. to say; to utter; (not used with nouns; not used in the imperative and rarely in the infinitive) | |
Entschuldige, was meintest du gerade? - Sorry, what did you just say? | |
3. v. to mean; to be convinced or sincere about something | |
Das sagt er nicht nur, das meint er auch. - He doesn’t just say it, he means it. | |
4. v. to mean; to have in mind; to convey | |
Was meintest du damit? - What did you mean by that? | |
Meinst du das rote oder das gelbe Haus? - Do you mean the red or the yellow house? | |
5. v. (now rare) to mean; to signify | |
Was meint dieses Wort? - What does this word mean? | |
6. det. (possessive) masculine accusative singular of mein | |
7. det. (possessive) dative plural of mein | |
Tisch |
1. n. table (a piece of furniture with a relatively deep surface at roughly waist or knee level); (specific uses include:) | |
2. n. dining table, dinner table | |
Kommt, der Tisch ist gedeckt! - Come, the table is set! | |
3. n. desk (table used for writing) | |
Legen amerikanische Chefs wirklich die Füße auf den Tisch? - Do American bosses really put their feet on the desk? | |
4. n. bench, workbench (table at which manual work is done) | |
5. n. (figuratively, now only in compounds and expressions) meal (food served or eaten as a repast) | |
Herr Weber ist zu Tisch. - Mr Weber is at lunch. | |
steckst |
1. v. second-person singular present of stecken | |
stecken |
1. v. to stick; to put; to insert; to pin | |
2. v. to stick; to be stuck | |
Die Katze steckt im Baum. - The cat is stuck in the tree. | |
in Schwierigkeiten stecken - to be in trouble (lit. to be stuck in difficulty) | |
3. v. to be hiding (by location or causally behind something) | |
Er wusste nicht, wo seine Katze wieder steckt. - He didn’t know where his cat is again. | |
Nur seine Eltern und zwei gute Freunde wissen, dass er hinter dem Auftritt steckt. - Only his parents and two good friends know he is hiding behind the site. | |
Kartelle stecken hinter den hohen Preisen bei Matratzen. - Cartels are behind the high prices in matresses. | |
4. v. (ditransitive, informal) to inform privily, to intimate | |