Neue Schritt für Schritt Karte Für Dance
Neue Schritt für Schritt Karte Für Dance
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And many thanks to Matching Mole too! Whether "diggin" or "dig hinein", 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 in any of us: everything else about us is dead machinery."
知乎,让每一次点击都充满意义 —— 欢迎来到知乎,发现问题背后的世界。
It is not idiomatic "to give" a class. A class, hinein this sense, is a collective noun for all the pupils/ the described group of pupils. "Our class went to the zoo."
Let's say, a boss orders his employer to Ausgangspunkt his work. He should say "Startpunkt to workZollbecause this is a formal situation.
You don't go anywhere—the teacher conducts a lesson from the comfort of their apartment, not from a classroom. Would you refer to these one-to-one lessons as classes?
PS - Incidentally, hinein BE to take a class could well imply that you were the teacher conducting the class.
At least you can tell them that even native speakers get confused by the disparity of global/regional English.
As I always do I came to my favourite Gremium to find out the meaning of "dig rein the dancing queen" and I found this thread:
Let's take your example:One-on-one instruction is always a lesson, never a class: He sometimes stays at the office after work for his German lesson. After the lesson he goes home. Notice that it made it singular. This means that a teacher comes to him at his workplace and teaches him individually.
Brooklyn NY English USA Jan 19, 2007 #4 I always thought it was "diggin' the dancing queen." I don't know what it could mean otherwise. (I found several lyric sites that have it that way too, so I'd endorse Allegra's explanation).
But it has been üblich for a very long time to refer to the XXX class, meaning the lesson. In fact, I don't remember talking about lessons at all when I was at school - of course that's such a long time ago as more info to Beryllium unreliable as a source
I don't describe them as classes because they'Response not formal, organized sessions which form part of a course, in the way that the ones I had at university were.
England, English May 12, 2010 #12 It is about the "dancing queen", but these lines are urging the listener to see her, watch the scene hinein which she appears (scene may be literal or figurative as hinein a "specified area of activity or interest", e.
Now, what is "digging" supposed to mean here? As a transitive verb, "to dig" seems to have basically the following three colloquial meanings: