@nepmany1: 1. weil – means “because” and is used to give a reason. • Example: I am learning German because I want to work in Germany. → In German, weil starts a subordinate clause, so the verb goes at the end. 2. dass – means “that” and is used to state a fact or opinion. • Example: I know that German can be difficult. → The verb also goes at the end of the subordinate clause. 3. nicht – negates a verb, adjective, or adverb. • Example: I speak German, but I do not speak perfectly. 4. kein – negates a noun (like “a” or “an”). • Example: I have no book. → kein replaces the indefinite article in negation. 💡 Quick tip: • nicht → negates verbs/adjectives/adverbs • kein → negates nouns • weil / dass → introduce subordinate clauses; verb goes at the end. #FromNepalToGermany #GermanyJourney #LearnGerman #Deutschlernen #germany