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Voytaszek Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Germans

In which context we can use the definite article and in which none to reffer to all the German nation.

  

Top answer

Voytaszek In which context we can use the definite article and in which none to reffer refer to all the German nation. I'm not sure what your question is, but if you want to refer the whole German nation, use "Germany". There is no difference in meaning with nationality words in the following kinds of sentences: Germans are fun-loving people.

  • Voytaszek In which context we can use the definite article and in which none to reffer refer to all the German nation.
  • I'm not sure what your question is, but if you want to refer the whole German nation, use "Germany".
  • There is no difference in meaning with nationality words in the following kinds of sentences: Germans are fun-loving people.
  • / The Germans are fun-loving people.
  • CJ
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2 Answers
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Voytaszek

In which context we can use the definite article and in which none to reffer refer to all the German nation.

I'm not sure what your question is, but if you want to refer the whole German nation, use "Germany".

There is no difference in meaning with nationality words in the following kinds

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Do we say; the german native speakers if we are refering to the all people who speak the language or we should omit the article? What is a general rule when we refer to all objects from the same group?

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