How to Learn German in 5 Minutes Per Day
The German language, German Deutsch, is the official language of Germany and Austria, as well as one of Switzerland’s official languages. Along with English, Frisian, and Dutch, German is part of the Indo-European language family’s West Germanic group (Netherlandic, Flemish). The recorded history of Germanic languages begins with the first encounter of their speakers with the Romans in the first century BCE. There was just one “Germanic” language at the time, and for several centuries afterwards, with only slight dialect variations. A “German” (i.e., High German) language can only be spoken after the 6th century CE.
Let's now see how you can learn German in 5 min !
Memrise From the first session, the Memrise app will immerse you in learning German. That’s it; you’ve been addicted to German lessons. You’ll watch footage of genuine Germans in their hometowns speaking in their original tongue. So you can learn to recognise real voices rather than bots.
Drops offers a free subscription, you get a five-minute learning session per 10 hours. Drops is a fun—and, I must say, extremely satisfying—app to learn with, thanks to its vibrant colours and video game-like structure of the lessons.
5 min YouTube video
If you’re on a tight budget, have access to a computer or phone, or simply enjoy watching YouTube, you can use it to learn German in five minutes a day.
GermanClass101.com offers a learning series for 3 mins in a Learn German in 3 Minutes Series. This short, engaging series includes nine videos that walk you through the basics of Mandarin German. And the best part? They’re only three minutes long.
FluentU
The channel is made up of playlists of short German conversations about things like going out to dinner with a friend, shopping at a clothing store, or going in for a job interview.
Flashcards
Whether you study with flashcards for five minutes every day or once a week, here are our favourite flashcard apps and websites that are completely free to use. You can use Quizlet, Anki etc
Duolingo
Learn German in just 5 minutes a day with our game-like lessons. Whether you’re a beginner starting with the basics or looking to practise your reading, writing and speaking.
Finally,
German is an inflected language having four cases (nominative, accusative, genitive, dative) for nouns, pronouns, and adjectives, three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter), and strong and weak verbs. German is the native language of more than 90 million people globally, placing it among the languages with the greatest number of native speakers. German is extensively studied as a foreign language and is one of the Western world’s major cultural languages. German as a written language is fairly consistent; it differs no more across Germany, Austria, and Switzerland than written English does in the United States and the British Commonwealth. However, as a spoken language, German has several dialects, the majority of which belong to either the High German or Low German dialectal groupings. The primary distinction between High and Low German is in the sound system, particularly in the consonants. High German, the language of Germany’s southern highlands, is the official written language.
There’s an amazing new way to learn German! Want to see what everyone’s talking about!