Is a truly beautiful piece of music (after all it Bach☺) Aus der Tiefe means “From the Depths”. Here is a particularly wonderful rendition of the piece . Enjoy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lm84E2At9Zk
Wait, when did Mel Blanc record Yah, Das Ist Ein Christmas Tree. Probably doesn’t matter, it’s based on Schnitzelbank, which Schulz could have heard growing up.
Templo S.U.D. almost 3 years ago
I wish I knew my ancestral German more… of course it was the Pennsylvania dialect my great-granddad might’ve grown up speaking.
MY DOG IS MY CO PILOT almost 3 years ago
Is a truly beautiful piece of music (after all it Bach☺) Aus der Tiefe means “From the Depths”. Here is a particularly wonderful rendition of the piece . Enjoy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lm84E2At9Zk
MoonlitKnight Premium Member almost 3 years ago
“‘Driving Schroeder Crazy’ for Dummies”….possible future entry on the New York Times bestseller list?
kelloggs2066 almost 3 years ago
Back when young kids spoke proper German?
Troglodyte almost 3 years ago
Das der thing mit German grammar – makes you wanna die! :D
iggyman almost 3 years ago
Not nice, Charlie Brown no wonder you get picked on!
Kaputnik almost 3 years ago
I took German in high school. The concept of grammatical gender was a bit baffling sometimes. Der Mann and die Frau made sense, but das Mädchen?
If I’m remembering correctly, that is.
VegaAlopex almost 3 years ago
…or show an ignorance of the dative singular of a feminine noun in German, Charlie Brown.
Neo Stryder almost 3 years ago
This is the Charlie Brown The Coasters were siging about.
Gandalf almost 3 years ago
Bach is amazing, and so is the German language.
gantech almost 3 years ago
The book would contain a collections of die’s and doe’s…
Ok, that was a stretch.
knight1192a almost 3 years ago
Wait, when did Mel Blanc record Yah, Das Ist Ein Christmas Tree. Probably doesn’t matter, it’s based on Schnitzelbank, which Schulz could have heard growing up.
Bob. almost 3 years ago
I worked with German POWs back in the summer of 1945. No problem with the language. They knew enough English.