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Grammar: Indefinite pronoun ‘alle’ (all) – Grammar: Pronoun declension

My German Journey: Wrestling with ‘Alle’ and Pronoun Declensions Okay, deep breath. It’s been six months since I moved to Berlin, and let me tell you, German is hard. Not just hard in the sense of learning a new language, but hard in the sense of feeling like my brain is perpetually short-circuiting every time…
‘alle’, (all), A1, A2, accountant, administrative assistant, architect, automotive mechanic, B1, B1.1, B1.2, B2, baker, bank clerk, barista, C1, career, caregiver, carpenter, category:declension|92, category:grammar|99, category:language|79, category:linguistics|82, category:morphology|84, category:phonoetics|68, category:pronoun|87, category:semantics|71, category:syntax|95, category:translation|89, chef, civil engineer, construction worker, cook, customer service agent, data analyst, declension, dentist, doctor, dtz, elderly care nurse, electrical engineer, electrician, engineer, foryourpage, fyp, german, gleich, grammar, grammatik, hotel manager, human resources specialist, ich, ichkommegleich, indefinite, insurance agent, integration, interpreter, it support specialist, kindergarten teacher, komme, language, lawyer, legal assistant, logistics coordinator, marketing specialist, mechanical engineer, medical assistant, nurse, occupational therapist, office manager, pharmacist, physiotherapist, plumber, profession:analyst|99, profession:compiler|62, profession:editor|72, profession:grammarian|78, profession:lexicographer|88, profession:linguist|85, profession:researcher|75, profession:specialist|81, profession:teacher|91, profession:translator|65, project manager, pronoun, receptionist, sales representative, school teacher, sentence structure, social worker, software engineer, sorterien, speech therapist, system administrator, tax consultant, teacher, teamwork, translator, truck driver, university lecturer, waiter, warehouse worker, web developer

