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“Wo” is used to ask for the place where something is/was/will be situated. Wo bist du gerade? (Where are you at the moment?) “Wohin” asks for the direction. Wohin gehst du? (Where are you going (to)?)
Mar 20, 2018
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Oct 16, 2019 · The first usage denotes a place and translates as wo, the other a direction: it translates as wohin. Hin and her are particles that denote ...
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Dec 6, 2018 · The first usage denotes a place and translates as wo, the other a direction: it translates as wohin. Hin and her are particles that denote ...
Missing: https:// | Show results with:https://
Jun 20, 2017 · The first usage denotes a place and translates as wo, the other a direction: it translates as wohin. Hin and her are particles that denote ...
Dec 6, 2018 · “Wohin” means “where to” and “woher” means “where from”. So “wohin gehst Du?” is “where are you going?” And “woher kommst ...
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Oct 16, 2019 · In German, "wo" is used to ask for a location or place, while "wohin" is used to ask for a direction or destination. So, "wo" would be used to ...
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Feb 7, 2018 · Always followed by Accusative: für, um, ohne, durch, wider, entlang, gegen. If your particular sentence can't be tweaked to work with these ...
Aug 4, 2015 · The German wohin and woher do in fact have English equivalents. They are just no longer used, because they sound archaic. Wohin in English is ...
The German wohin and woher do in fact have English equivalents. They are just no longer used, because they sound archaic. Wohin in English is whither, ...
Dec 6, 2018 · “Wohin” means “where to” and “woher” means “where from”. So “wohin gehst Du?” is “where are you going?” And “woher kommst ...