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By
Last updated:
April 22, 2022
Although I spent four years taking vocabulary quizzes and reading German literature in college, nothing improved my fluency like learning a word a day.
Every day, I’d consult a “word of the day” resource and see that day’s word, then I’d make sure to use the word of the day somewhere in conversation throughout my day.
Using this method, you can also make sure to get your daily serving of German vocab practice—every single day!
Contents
- German Word Of The Day
- InnovativeLanguage.com
- Transparent Language
- Memrise
- German word of the day App (available for Android)
- Deutsch perfekt Wort des Tages (iOS | Android)
- How Can You Benefit from a “Word of the Day” Resource?
-
- Learn New Vocabulary
- Practice Correct Usage
- Improve Your Comprehension
- Learn Accurate Pronunciation
- How to Make the Most of Words of the Day
Download:
This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you
can take anywhere.
Click here to get a copy. (Download)
German Word Of The Day
It’s right in the name.
German Word Of The Day is a site that centers around German vocabulary and words of the day. It has a specific word of the day page that includes past words of the day so you can review all the new vocabulary you’ve learned or catch up if you’ve missed a few days. Plus, there are great downloadable resources like vocab lists and grammar references.
InnovativeLanguage.com
InnovativeLanguage.com has a word of the day resource for tons of languages, including German. What’s really great is you can sign up to have the word sent to your email address daily. That way you get a reminder to study.
Each word of the day comes with a “mini-lesson” that includes the word used in various sentences and a quiz so you can practice it yourself. You can even go back and do the lessons with past words of the day.
Transparent Language
With Transparent Language, you can get words of the day in your email inbox, through Facebook, through Twitter or in an RSS feed. Better yet, subscribe with them all so it’s impossible to forget.
Like many word of the day resources, Transparent Language includes example sentences and translations. However, its coolest feature is the “Find this word on Twitter” button. This resource pulls up recent tweets in German that include the word of the day so you can it in modern, everyday contexts.
Memrise
Memrise is a service specialized for learning vocabulary. Their philosophy involves “mems,” or specific flashcards that help you remember the words. Mems might be pictures related to the word, example sentences or mnemonic devices. You can choose from the mems other users have created or make your own.
Memrise actually has options for how much new vocabulary you think you can handle. You can do a word a day, or you can do ten words a day. Either way, there’s both the website and an easy-to-use app that’ll remind you to study.
German word of the day App (available for Android)
Here’s an app specifically for learning the word of the day.
Do you want your word of the day in the morning, like me? Or right before you go to bed? Whatever your learning style, this app has you covered: you can set it to send you a notification at a specific time every day, so you can study whenever it’s convenient.
It also has example sentences along with audio recordings that help you learn good pronunciation and usage.
Deutsch perfekt Wort des Tages (iOS | Android)
Deutsch Perfekt has a series of apps for German learners. This one is devoted entirely to words of the day.
Along with definitions and example sentences, Deutsch Perfekt provides audio recordings from many different native speakers and grammatical usage notes.
Together, these help you apply new vocabulary in real life.
How Can You Benefit from a “Word of the Day” Resource?
Learn New Vocabulary
One of the best ways you can use a word of the day system is to improve your vocabulary. It may not seem like a lot, but one word each day adds up. When you consider that just 1,300 words will let you understand 85% of German texts, a year’s worth of words of the day is a significant boost to your vocabulary.
A larger vocabulary is important because it lets you communicate more accurately. German is especially famous for having unique words to describe very specific situations or feelings, and if you know them, you’ll have no problem talking to native speakers.
Practice Correct Usage
Good word of the day resources won’t just give you the definition. They’ll provide you with real-world examples, too. In some cases, you might’ve already known the word, but as a word of the day, you can better learn when and why German speakers use it. This also improves communication.
Improve Your Comprehension
When you’re speaking a foreign language, misunderstandings can occur when you don’t know a specific word. If a native speaker uses a vocabulary word you’re unfamiliar with, you might not realize exactly what they’re saying, even though they explain themselves with other German words. And if you’re reading a book or other text, there’s no second explanation.
By expanding your vocabulary, you can more accurately understand the speech and writing of those around you. That means more efficient communication and faster improvement.
Learn Accurate Pronunciation
Especially in German, your pronunciation can make a big difference. Say a word wrong, and the other person might not understand you. Or worse, they’ll think you said something different.
Many word of the day resources have pronunciation notes, and some even have audio or video recordings by native speakers. Listen closely to these and try to imitate the way they say the word. It’s even a good idea to try recording yourself saying the word to see how well it matches that of native speakers.
How to Make the Most of Words of the Day
First of all, you should always actively use your word of the day resources. It’s easy to just glance at your notification or email and then forget the word. You have to consciously read the word and consider its definition and usage notes.
A great way to help cement the word in your memory is to go over it twice, specifically at the beginning and end of the day. This encourages the brain to store it in long-term memory.
Of course, like all aspects of language learning, the most important thing is to use your word of the day in real life. That’s how the language center of your brain fully absorbs the word into your German file. This is more than just saying the word out loud. It’s going to the grocery store or the bank and applying it in your daily routine. Even if you don’t have a German landlady making you dinner like I did, write to your penpal or get on a forum and try to use the word naturally.
Similarly, find natives using the word in a real-life context. That could mean highlighting it in a book you’re reading or taking note of it in a German TV show or online video.
Luckily, there are a ton of possibilities across the internet and it’s just about finding quality resources that work for you.
For instance, you could use FluentU to learn German as it’s actually spoken. Each video comes with interactive subtitles in German and English, so you can follow along as you watch and click on words for easy-to-find definitions. You can even use FluentU’s customizable vocabulary review features to create your own “word of the day” vocabulary list and study the flashcards to make sure they stay in your head.
Alternatively, you could read the newspaper every morning to learn a new word every day and easily slip it into a conversation about current events. The writing style of newspapers will also teach you sentence structure that’s clear and concise, which will help you express yourself better in German. Plus, you could pair this activity with watching news segments to improve both your listening and reading.
Now that you’ve hopefully found the right resource, get out there and use your new vocabulary!
It can’t be overstated: studying vocabulary doesn’t do you any good unless you use the words you learn.
With words of the day, you have constant opportunities. Don’t let that go to waste. Whether it’s on the street, at home or online, toss these words into your everyday speech. Day by day, you’ll get closer to fluency.
Download:
This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you
can take anywhere.
Click here to get a copy. (Download)
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Definitions
German > German | |
Handsäge | |
[1] Werkzeug: Säge, die mit der Hand geführt wird | |
[1] „Die Sicherheitskräfte beschlagnahmten einen Schneidbrenner, eine Handsäge mit Blutspuren und einen Wagen mit blutverklebtem Kofferraum.“ | |
English > German | |
handsaw | |
Fuchsschwanz, Handsäge |
People in German-speaking countries take their holidays seriously and the language reflects that. If a holiday falls around a weekend, German speakers might take a day – or a couple of days – off work to bridge the gap between the holiday and the next weekend.
If a public holiday falls on a Tuesday or Thursday, they might take the corresponding Monday or Friday off work in order to get a four-day weekend by using up just one day of vacation time. In German-speaking countries it’s also common to book time off in the four days before Good Friday, or the four days off after Easter Monday, in order to get almost ten-days off by only using up four vacation days.
Easter also presents a great opportunity for some people to use eight vacation days – four on each side of the Easter weekend if they have Friday and Monday off – to get a full 16-day holiday.
Whether it’s bridge day — or “bridge day” — window dayor “window day” — or even gore day (more on that below), the fact that there are multiple special German words for this practice should tell you how seriously people in German-speaking countries take this tradition.
Bridge or window?
bridge day is best used in both Germany and in German-speaking Switzerland, but not typically in Austria.
Some German speakers in these countries will use it a bit more restrictively – and keep its meaning purely as a “bridge” day between the weekend and a public holiday that falls in the middle of the week rather than on a Friday or Monday. Because Easter falls on both Friday and Monday, certain German speakers won’t describe extra days off around Easter as “bridge days.”
The Landwasserviadukt in Filisur, Switzerland. Photo by Pascal Debrunner on Unsplash
The next such opportunity to use such a bridge day is on May 18th for Ascension Day – a public holiday in both Germany and Switzerland that falls on a Thursday. Taking the Friday off the next day would count as a bridge day.
READ ALSO: German word of the day: The bridge day
No one knows precisely why, but bridge day hasn’t taken off in Austria, with German speakers in the alpine country using window day. The “window day,” however, means essentially the same thing – and might refer to “open windows” in the middle of the week. While many Austrian German speakers are likely to understand what you mean if you use bridge day there, using window day is at least likely to demonstrate that you’re familiar with some Austrian lingo.
READ ALSO: German word of the day: Der Fenstertag
What exactly is Zwickeltag?
While window day works in much of Austria – and certainly in Vienna – one Austrian region has yet another word of its own. As a gore describes a wedge-shaped piece that holds together things coming together at a focal point — for example, fabric at the crotch of a pair of jeans — gore day is used in Upper Austria.
The region, with its capital in Linz and sharing a border with the German state of Bavaria, uses its own word for the beloved holiday tradition, although people there are still likely to understand either bridge day or window day. gore day is quite specific to Upper Austria though, with perhaps even native Austrians from other parts of the country not always aware of it — to say nothing of either Germans or Swiss Germans.
Examples
The “bridge day” words are pretty easy to use in a sentence, as they’re standard nouns, with the singular form being masculine. You might ask someone “Are you taking the bridge days off at Easter?” In Germany and German-speaking Switzerland, you would say:
Do you take the bridging days around Easter off?
Or in Austria you might ask someone “Are you taking a bridge day off for Easter?” Here you would say:
Do you take a window day off on Easter?
Or in Upper Austria, you would just switch out the word like so:
Do you take a gusset day off on Easter?